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FT.com: How China Rules The Waves (Shipbuilding Tech, Port Tech, Shipping & Maritime Network)

China Xinhua @XHNews
Another world record! Each crane in Asia's first automated port in east China's Qingdao can handle 39.6 containers per hour, fastest of its kind worldwide

Within just 9 hours, a total of 1785 containers have been handled in Asia's first automated port in east China's Qingdao, making another China wonder

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First China-made 'smart' ship debuts in Shanghai
Xinhua 09:07 UTC+8, 2017-12-06

China's first "smart" ship embedded with a domestically-developed intelligent navigation system made its debut in Shanghai Tuesday.

The 179-meter-long ship, Great Intelligence, is 32-meters-wide and 15-meters-high, with a maximum loading capacity of 38,800 tonnes. It is installed with SOMS, a China-Developed marine system with autonomous learning ability and intelligent operation system. It can analyze real-time navigation and meteorological data, pick the best routes and alert the crew to hidden dangers in advance.

Developed by China State Shipbuilding Corporation (CSSC), Great Intelligence will be used by Sinotrans Shipping to transport coal and salt between China, Australia and Southeast Asia.

"Great Intelligence will become smarter as it accumulates more data," said Qiu Bohua, with the Systems Engineering Research Institute of CSSC. "Not only can it spot dangers and system bugs, it also can lower transport costs and raise efficiency."

Technical performance of the ship has reached advanced levels, and it has passed official assessments by the China Classification Society and Lloyd's Register of Shipping.

"It shows that China has taken the lead in merchant ship design and construction," said Sun Feng, vice president of China Classification Society. "The smart ship has also laid solid foundations for unmanned ship development."

Compared with Green Dolphin, an ordinary ship with the same capacity, Great Intelligence can improve propulsive efficiency by 3 percent and cut daily oil consumption by 4 percent.

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From weibo, exhibits from CSIC (China shipbuilding industry corp) 719 institute at Marintec 2017 in Shanghai.

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Translation: Marine nuclear power platform demonstration project.
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Submersible nuclear power platform
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Nuclear power integrated support/supply ship
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Nuclear power ice breaker
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Thursday, December 07, 2017,12:21
First small unmanned cargo ship in pipeline
By Ren Xiaojin

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In this Aug 8, 2016 photo, a cargo ship is seen anchored at Qingdao port in Qingdao, East China's Shandong province. (YU FANGPING / XINHUA)

A Chinese high-tech company is building the world's first small-sized unmanned cargo ship, demonstrating that China is taking the lead in the unmanned surface vehicle industry.

On Wednesday, the Shenzhen-based Oceanalpha Co Ltd signed a memorandum of understanding with Wuhan University of Technology, the Chinese Classification Society and the Zhuhai municipal government to start a project that will result in the small-sized unmanned surface vehicle, or USV.

"It will be the first USV that is entirely domestically developed with Chinese technology and guided by the Beidou navigation system," said Sun Feng, vice-president of CCS.

The vehicle will be ready to test in the water by the end of next year and put into commercial operation by 2019

It will have a loading capacity of 500 metric tons and be able to sail 500 nautical miles (930 km) with its battery fully charged.

Such unmanned vehicles are expected to lower the number of human-error incidents at sea, reduce labor costs and cut emissions by using batteries instead of gas.

"Over 70 to 80 percent of incidents that happened in the sea are man-made, and 40 percent of the entire running cost goes to human labor," said Zhang Yunfei, founder of Oceanalpha.

"Using USVs can largely reduce the cost and incidents. Also, the vehicle body is much lighter, which enables it to be powered by batteries instead of gas, efficiently cutting down the emission," he said.

ALSO READ: Shanghai shipyard sets sights on cruise liner market

In recent years, China has developed very fast in the USV and intelligent surface vehicle sector, Sun said.

On Tuesday, China State Shipbuilding Corporation delivered the world's first smart ship, Great Intelligence, with a loading capacity of 38,800 tons. It is equipped with the China-made marine system SOMS, and has self-learning ability and an intelligent operation system.

"Great Intelligence has a smart brain and will become smarter as it learns by collecting data," said Sun Wei, deputy general manager of CSSC. "It will analyze data and provide optimized suggestions to the captain."

Early this year, Oceanalpha launched an unmanned guard vehicle, which has already been adopted for military use.
 
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World's largest automated cargo wharf to start operation
Source:Ecns.cn Published: 2017/11/3 11:32:02

Photo taken on November 1, 2017 shows the construction site of the fourth phase of the Yangshan deep water port in Shanghai, east China. World's biggest automated cargo wharf, the fourth phase of the Yangshan deep water port, will start operation next mouth. Upon completion of the project, the port will have seven deep-water berths and is expected to handle an annual throughput of four million TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent unit). (Photo: China News Service/ Zhang Hengwei)

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China's Biggest Automated Cargo Wharf Yangshan Deep-water Port Starts Operation in Shanghai
CCTV+
Published on Dec 9, 2017

China's biggest automated cargo wharf, the fourth phase of the Yangshan deep-water port started operation on Sunday.

The equipment has been tested for debugging in recent days. Driverless automatic guided vehicles (AGV) were seen carrying containers and moving in the port and overhead cranes were handling containers.

In the preliminary stage, 100 pieces of intelligent equipment are put into service, including 50 AGVs, 10 overhead cranes and 40 rail-mounted gantry cranes. According to the plan for the port, the fourth phase of the Yangshan deep water port will be equipped with 130 AGVs, 26 overhead cranes and 120 rail-mounted gantry cranes.

They can perform tasks based on the instructions of the system.

"The port is automated in container loading and intelligent in production. The background system collects and sorts out all the instructions and information, inputs them into computer. Then the intelligent system turns them into operation instructions and sends them to the operational equipment. Then the unmanned operational equipment achieves efficient and safe automated operation,"said Luo Xunjie, vice general-manager of Zhendong Container Terminal Branch under the Shanghai International Port(Group) Co.,Ltd..

The core technology of the robotic port was developed independently by China.

The forth phrase of Yangshan port takes up an area of 2.23 million square meters, whose coastline stretches as long as 2,350 meters. It consists of two 70,000 dead-weight tonnage (DWT) berths and five 50,000 DWT berths.
 
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From weibo, exhibits from CSIC (China shipbuilding industry corp) 719 institute at Marintec 2017 in Shanghai.

Translation: Marine nuclear power platform demonstration project.
Submersible nuclear power platform
Nuclear power integrated support/supply ship
Nuclear power ice breaker

I am hoping that CSIC has already been working on nuclear powered ice-breakers. As the Arctic opens up for trade and exploitation, China needs to ensure capability to sail without purchasing breaker Service from Canada or Russia.
 
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TECH IT OUT: Why do we need an 'indoor ocean'?
By Yang Zhao
2017-12-10 17:31 GMT+8


The Deepwater Offshore Basin in Shanghai Jiaotong University is a laboratory like no other. Measuring 40 meters wide, 50 meters long and 40 meters down to the deepest point, it is one of the world's largest maneuvering and sea-keeping basins or, in other words, an "indoor ocean,” and the most advanced test facility of its kind.

But why do we need an indoor ocean?

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The Deepwater Offshore Basin at State Key Lab of Ocean Engineering, Shanghai Jiaotong University /CGTN Photo

Marine equipment has to undergo severe deep sea tests before it can be used out in the ocean. Equipment failure can not only cause huge economic losses but also natural disasters, such as the explosion and fire that took place on the Deepwater Horizon platform in the Gulf of Mexico several years ago.

The basin can help designers to understand what they are going to face, but in the relatively safe lab environment.

“We can simulate a complex marine environment with wind, waves, and strong currents in this lab,” said Xiao Longfei, researcher of the State Key Lab of Ocean Engineering.

The wave paddles move together like piano keys on the surface to create a variety of different waves. Working together, the right combination with the right intensity can create waves with a height of up to half a meter, which corresponds to an actual wave of up to 40 or 50 meters due to scaling ratio conversion.

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Wave- and wind-making systems working together /CGTN Photo

The lab's six-story flow system can also simulate an ocean current that spans from the surface of the water to the deep sea.

The wind-making, flow-making, and wave-making systems should be opened at the same time to simulate the coupling effect of the complicated marine environment.

“Our design makes it possible to scale the equipment that is needs to be tested down to that of a model. We put the model in our pool to test whether it can function properly in the sea where it will be deployed,” explained Peng Tao, deputy director of the lab.

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The model of a drilling rig taking tests /CGTN Photo

While most of the tests are for drilling rigs, ships and vessels will also be tested here. Under harsh sea conditions, the platform will tilt significantly, but more importantly, when a wave strikes a floating body, it will cause what scientists call "wave climbing." The waves can "climb" and hit critical equipment on the deck. Researchers need to perform tests and analysis in the lab to provide a basis for the design.

“It should be said that most of the ocean around the world can be simulated. The sea areas for deep-sea oil and gas development particularly can be perfectly simulated in this basin,” said Peng.
 
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China may take top spot in global shipbuilding orders over S.Korea
CGTN
2017-12-10 20:36 GMT+8

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China’s shipyards may capture the top position for new orders worldwide in 2017, outpacing those in South Korea, South Korean newspaper Aju Business Daily reported on Friday, citing marine industry tracker Clarkson Research. This would be the seventh consecutive year that China would be number one in terms of annual cumulative order intakes.

Shipbuilders all over the world received 19.51 million CGT (compensated gross tonnage) new ship orders by November this year and China topped the list with 7.13 CGT, followed by South Korea’s 5.74 CGT and Japan’s 1.82 CGT, according to latest data from Clarkson, the report said.

Although the global shipbuilding market has shown signs of recovery this year, South Korea’s mid-sized shipbuilding companies received sparse orders, newspaper The Korean Herald reported on Friday.

South Korea’s Ministry of Finance announced that the government is drawing up a blueprint for speeding up the recovery and restructuring process for one of the country's key industries by early next year, the report said.
 
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China makes waves in world shipbuilding
By Chu Daye Source:Global Times Published: 2017/12/11 21:38:39

Overall advantages will drive S.Korea from top spot

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A Chinese worker walks past the world's largest bulk carrier at a port in Qingdao, East China's Shandong Province. Photo: IC

As China is poised to overtake South Korea to become the world's largest shipbuilder in 2017, experts said Chinese advances in recent years have ended South Korea's technological edge. But they also noted that there might be some wrangling before China eventually becomes the undisputed world champion in shipbuilding.

The Seoul-based Aju Business Daily reported over the weekend that South Korea is likely to cede the title of the world's largest shipbuilder to China, which had a significant increase in the tonnage of orders in November, citing industry data. South Korea has held the No.1 spot since 2011, the report said.

As of early December, China had 27.05 million tons of orders out of a global total of 74.83 million tons, according to the report. Japan and South Korea were No.2 and No.3 with 15.83 million tons and 15.80 million tons, respectively.

Emerging as a low-cost, high-volume shipbuilder, China overtook South Korea during the 2008-10 global financial crisis.

Zheng Ping, chief analyst of industry news site chineseport.cn, said that many factors determine a nation's competitiveness as a shipbuilder and South Korea maintained its global leadership with its technological edge.

"However, the edge was eroded by Chinese rivals during China's 12th Five-Year Plan period (2011-15). Now Chinese shipyards can build what they could not before, including ultra-large container vessels (ULCVs), liquefied natural gas carriers and luxury cruise ships," Zheng told the Global Times on Monday.

ULCVs are super-sized container ships that can carry about 20,000 20-foot equivalent units.

Markets for these advanced ships were previously dominated by South Korea's "big three" shipbuilders - Hyundai Heavy Industries, Samsung Heavy Industries and Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering.

"The catch-up in technology coincides with other advantages enjoyed by China, such as the vast size of its numerous shipyards, its world leading shipping industry and top ports, and favorable government policies," Zheng said.

"In the long run, China will be the undisputed shipbuilder of the world," Zheng predicted.

In the short term, however, there's a high chance of wrangling between the two countries for the sweet spot, experts said.

"The competition reminds me of a point at the turn of the century when Singapore and Shanghai vied for the spot as the world's largest port. The former won a few rounds, as the two ports grew in competition in their throughput, but the title was eventually overtaken by Shanghai," Zheng said.

"As ships are expensive, factors such as favorable government policies like subsidies and lending policies, and the value of the currency, all have a big sway in fleet owners' decisions on where to place orders," Zheng said.

"It is possible that the South Korean government will announce favorable policies to support its shipbuilding industry to regain the top spot after a loss to China," noted Zheng.

However, a senior Chinese shipbuilding engineer in a Shanghai shipyard who spoke to the Global Times on condition of anonymity said on Monday that management efficiency is another advantage of South Korean shipbuilders, in addition to technology.

"Further, there are some supportive policies in terms of order distribution at some Chinese shipyards, and we are facing a diminishing labor advantage," the engineer said.

"After the three major shipyards of South Korea tackles their production bottlenecks and fix its problems in their finances, the South Koreans could certainly regain the No.1 status," he said.
 
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Walking into China-constructed intelligent marine fishing ground
China Plus Published: 2017-12-11 19:48:05

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A photo taken on December 8, 2017 shows the world's first semi-submersible intelligent marine fishing ground in the Norwegian Sea. The main body structure and system assembly of the fishing ground were completed in China, which demonstrated China's capability in high-end equipment development for deep-sea aquaculture. Regarded as the world's largest aquaculture support vessel, the fishing ground was delivered by China to Norwegian clients in Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province on June 3, 2017. [Photo: Xinhua]
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The system of the intelligent marine fishing ground has achieved intelligence and automation in terms of frying, feeding, real-time monitoring and fishing net cleaning. Its main body was constructed by the Wuchang Shipbuilding Industry Group Co. Ltd. of the China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation. [Photo: Xinhua]
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The project is an important strategic development for Norway's Salmar ASA with the support of the Norwegian government. A total of 16 companies in Norway participated in the project. [Photo: Xinhua]
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Staff work in the salmon processing factory of Salmar ASA company on December 8, 2017. The modern aquaculture facility is equipped with more than 20,000 sensors and 100 monitoring devices. [Photo: Xinhua]

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Staff work in the salmon processing factory of Salmar ASA company on December 8, 2017. The modern aquaculture facility is equipped with more than 20,000 sensors and 100 monitoring devices. [Photo: Xinhua]

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Staff work in the salmon processing factory of Salmar ASA company on December 8, 2017. The modern aquaculture facility is equipped with more than 20,000 sensors and 100 monitoring devices. [Photo: Xinhua]
 
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China developing first smart oil carrier
By Zhang Xiaomin | China Daily | Updated: 2017-12-27 07:19

Engineers with Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Co are working on China's first smart crude oil carrier, which will incorporate technology to help the captain operate the ship.

The company is undertaking a special project named "smart ship 1.0 R&D", assigned by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, according to Guan Yinghua, deputy chief engineer of DSIC.

"The very large intelligent crude carrier will be the most important result of the project," said Guan, adding that smart vessels represent the future.

"We must seize the chance to innovate and upgrade our products. Unmanned vessels will be built as automation and intelligence keep improving and auxiliary decision-making becomes more effective," she said.

DSIC, based in Dalian, Liaoning province, built the country's first domestically developed aircraft carrier. It is a subsidiary of State-owned shipbuilding giant China Shipbuilding Industry Corp.

This year, the shipyard has delivered 24 high-end vessels, including large container ships capable of carrying 20,000 standard 20-foot containers, advanced deep-water semi-submersible drilling platforms, China's biggest ship for transporting live animals and a very large chemical tanker.

DSIC's annual revenue is expected to exceed 20 billion yuan ($3.05 billion). The company is pushing China's shipbuilding industry to shift from conventional shipbuilding to high-end vessels.

In July, the shipyard delivered a 319,000-ton crude carrier to China Merchants Energy Shipping Co.

It is among the new generation of energy-saving and environmentally friendly ships classified as very large crude carriers and independently developed by Guan and her fellow engineers.

DSIC is the nation's first shipyard that can design and manufacture 300,000-ton crude carriers.

It has delivered more than 70 VLCCs and has eight orders, accounting for more than 10 percent of the total number of such carriers in operation worldwide.

As a delegate to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, Guan said she was excited to hear Xi Jinping, general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, call innovation the "primary driving force behind development" and "the strategic underpinning for building a modernized economy".

Guan said, "Large-scale State-owned enterprises must unswervingly implement the national strategy, and the pace of scientific and technological innovation cannot be stopped."

Since the international financial crisis in 2008, the shipbuilding industry and the offshore industry have been in a downturn. Despite that, DSIC has delivered more than 380 high-performance civilian ships to owners around the world since 2006.

DSIC's service spans the entire life cycle of a ship, including research and development, construction, repair and scrapping.

Guo Ping, a professor at Dalian Maritime University, said that with a growing technical level and competitive prices, Chinese shipyards are winning more orders.
 
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Shanghai shipbuilder delivers 400,000-ton mega ore carrier
2018-01-11 16:37 Ecns.cn Editor:Gu Liping

Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Co., Ltd. delivers its second-generation very large ore carrier (VLOC) Yuanhehai in Shanghai, Jan. 11, 2018. The 400,000-dwt mega ship is 362 meters long, 65 meters wide and 30.4 meters high. It’s more economical, environment-friendly and safer than first-generation carriers, meeting the world’s top standards. The shipbuilder will build more VLOCs for China Ore Shipping. (Photo: China News Service/Yin Liqin)

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China leads 2017 global shipbuilding industry

CGTN

2018-01-12


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China ranked first in three indices measuring the development and the capacity of a country's shipbuilding industry in 2017, official data showed.

China's completion rate of ships reached 41.9 percent of the global total, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT).

The country also had 45.5 percent of global new orders and 44.6 percent of holding orders, said the MIIT.

The three indices showed that China is consolidating its status as the world's leading shipbuilding nation, said Luo Wen, vice minister of the MIIT.

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China COSCO Shipping Group in Dalian on October 4, 2017. /VCG Photo

From the 1950s to the beginning of the 21st century, the three indices were topped by Japan or the Republic of Korea (ROK). In 2010, China overtook the ROK as the world No.1. The record was held for years until China was surpassed by the ROK in the index for completion of ships in 2016 and ranked second overall.

The three indices reflected an improvement in the quality of China's shipbuilding industry, said Guo Dacheng, chairman of the China Association of the National Shipbuilding Industry.

He said shipbuilders in China have been developing not only high-value-added products, but also advanced customization services for customers.

https://news.cgtn.com/news/7a67544d78677a6333566d54/share_p.html
 
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World’s first unmanned straddle carrier produced in China
CGTN Published on Jan 14, 2018

The world's first unmanned container straddle carrier was produced in China and is expected to operate in June 2018. The newly developed unmanned straddle carrier is as tall as a four-story building, with six wheels. Straddle carriers are popular tools used in ports worldwide to load and unload containers. The unmanned straddle carrier is safer and more precise, capable to work under all weather conditions.
 
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World's First Deep-Sea Dynamic Positioning Oil Barge Begins Sea Trial

(Yicai Global) Jan. 15 -- SeaLoader 1, the world’s first deep-sea dynamic position oil barge, departed Qidong, Jiangsu province on Jan. 12 for a 10-day sea trial.

China’s COSCO Nantong Shipyard Co. made the vessel.

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