marine link image

Tsuneishi to Invest in Indonesia Shipyard Business

September 9, 2015

 Japanese shipbuilding and maritime transport company Tsuneishi Holdings will invest up to $40 million to open ship repair services in Indonesia amid increasing efforts by the government to boost the archipelago's maritime industry, reports Jakarta Globe.

 
Yasuharu Fushimi, chairman and president at Tsuneishi Holdins, said in a statement: "We see a big potential in Indonesia's shipping industry. We've estimated that there's a potential of about 3,293 ships per year for the ship repair service."
 
Tsuneishi's venture into Indonesia is estimated to create up to 1,000 jobs, says the statement.
 
Fushimi said that Tsuneishi will enter the ship repair service in Indonesia for the first phase, before entering the shipping industry in the second phase. However, he didn't disclose a specific schedule for both plans. 
 
With a consolidated revenue of 284 billion yen ($2.3 billion) in 2013, Hiroshima-based Tsuneishi Holdings is the seventh-biggest shipping firm in Japan with presence in the Philippines, China and Paraguay.
 

Logistics News

Russian Oil Producers Threaten Force Majeure Over Baltic Port Attacks

Russian Oil Producers Threaten Force Majeure Over Baltic Port Attacks

BIMCO: 130 Container Ships Stranded in Persian Gulf

BIMCO: 130 Container Ships Stranded in Persian Gulf

Hapag-Lloyd Earnings Down from Last Year

Hapag-Lloyd Earnings Down from Last Year

Transneft Looks to Redirect Oil From Attacked Baltic Ports

Transneft Looks to Redirect Oil From Attacked Baltic Ports

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

France shares the U.S. goal of reopening the Hormuz Strait with its foreign minister
Bickert, Meta's former content policy chief and now Harvard professor, will be teaching at Harvard.
The trucking industry is stuck in a slump for years because of the rising US diesel prices