Philly Shipyard announced Thursday that it will build up
to four new container ships and is in “advanced discussions” to create a new cargo
shipping line to provide transpacific service between the West Coast and
Hawaii.
The former Aker Philadelphia Shipyard, renamed in
December 2015, said the vessels will provide work for 1,200 employees at the
South Philadelphia facility through 2021.
The shipyard has ordered parts to begin construction and
“is actively promoting the formation” of a new freight carrier to compete
across the Pacific between Hawaii and the U.S. mainland.
Currently, the route is served by only two carriers,
Matson Inc. and the Pasha Group. Some U.S.-flag container ships now
transporting a mix of cargoes to Hawaii are old steamships that by 2020 will
not meet tighter emissions standards.
The new fuel-efficient and “environment-friendly” vessels
will be built on spec, without a buyer. A maritime leasing company has offered
preliminary terms for a bareboat charter, or leasing, structure, officials
said.
Philly Shipyard said it is “in advanced discussions” with
a major U.S. shipping operator to create the cargo line with a fleet of ships
that will be built at the shipyard here. “Several prominent investors and
lenders in the U.S. shipping market have expressed interest,” the announcement
said.
Currently, Philly Shipyard is constructing two
850-foot-long container ships for Matson Navigation Co. of Honolulu. The ships
are capable of moving 3,600 20-foot containers at speeds greater than 23 knots.
The ships announced Thursday will be “a continuation of
the series” being built for Matson that will be completed in 2018 and 2019.
“We are excited to get started on building a new fleet of
container ships for a new carrier in the Hawaii trade,” said Philly Shipyard
president and CEO Steinar Nerbovik. “And
we are pleased to have received such positive feedback from well-known U.S.
marine players and financing sources.”
Philly Shipyard, the nation’s second-largest commercial
shipyard after General Dynamics Nassco of San Diego, constructs oceangoing
vessels in accordance with the U.S. Jones Act, which requires U.S.-made and
U.S.-operated vessels to transport goods among U.S. ports.
In 2020, when stricter emissions regulations take effect,
several older steam-powered vessels serving the Hawaii trade route will not
comply “without substantial and costly modifications,” the shipyard said. “Even if these aging steamships are modified,
they would be less reliable and carry significantly higher operating costs” in
fuel consumption, personnel, and maintenance requirements than a modern fleet.
“Philly Shipyard believes these circumstances create a
unique opportunity for a new Jones Act carrier to enter the Hawaii container
ship trade,” it said in the statement. Unless new ships enter the market,
starting in 2020, local commerce “may be adversely impacted by the new
emissions standards,” the yard said.
Philly Shipyard said former senior U.S. shipping
executives with experience in the Hawaii container-ship trade are assisting,
including John Keenan, former president and chief operating officer of Horizon
Lines Inc. In 2015, Horizon Lines sold
its Hawaii trade-lane business to the Pasha Group.
The first two ships, announced Thursday, will be
completed in 2020, and the second two in 2021. They are being designed to meet
current and future market trends for larger-sized containers and faster transit
times, and will be capable of running on LNG fuel, officials said.
Philly Shipyard has built and delivered 26 ships in its
nearly 20-year history, including four for use in the Hawaii container-ship
trade between 2003 and 2006. The
shipyard is constructing two 50,000-dwt tankers for a subsidiary of Kinder
Morgan Inc.
Source: Philly.com
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