Currently, what I understand is that Turkish shipbuilding industry mostly focuses on building yachts and repairing & servicing existing ships
Turkish shipbuilding industry focuses on chemical tankers*, special-purpose vessels (fish carriers, fish feeders, tugboats in any scale), feeder kind containerships, Ro-Ro and Ferries. Since 2010 the shipbuilding industry has shrank remarkably and it has affected the Turkish industry as well. In Addition to that during the last decade sea-trading habits has changed remarkably. LNG ships has appeared, Tankers has gone smaller, FPSOs has gained attention, Arctic-Ice grade vessels has gained an importance due to a new route emerging on arctics with molten ices.
* Asphalt, concrete, and other chemical carriers.
However, this does not mean Turkey doesnt have a commercial shipbuilding industry, we actually have a good one which has once focused on niche vessels, we may expect a return, but not vivid as the last time. This is also an advantage, we didnt have much trouble with LSTs, Logistic Ships, Supply at Sea and Combat support ships (DIMDEG), Patrol Boats (Steel construction) or other Auxillary vessels (MoShip-RatShip).
And Yacht industry is beneficial as well, since their main interest is on composite or aliminum.(Yonca-Onuk produces nice boats, Ares is a yacht shipyards but exports military boats).
Major Steel-based shipyards:
ADIK,
(LST and Cadet Training Ship-Qatar's)
Sefine,
(DIMDEG)
RMK Marine,
(Coast Guard Ships :OPV grade)
Dearsan,
(Patrol boats, FAC and Corvette for Turkmenistan)
Sedef,
(LHD)
Istanbul Shipyard,
(MoShip,RaTShip, SIGINT-ELINT and Training ship (Milgem with alternative configuration).
DESAN,
(Diver Training and Emergency response boat, probably along with offshore-anchor handling tugboats)
Repair-Maintanence focused shipyards do still earn well, and military projects are shared among the major shipyards. The smaller ones either acquired by larger one or serves as sub-contractors.
Turkish shipbuilding capacity rose from 654,000 DWT in 2003 to 1.4 million DWT in 2009 and the amount of sheet steel processed in shipyards has doubled. Maintenance and repair capacity have also seen a considerable increase. A million ton yearly capacity has been reached with the restructuring of some other shipyards. The Turkish shipbuilding industry shone brightly for a brief period between 2005 and 2008, increasing orders tenfold and moving from 23rd position to eighth, growing 360 percent in the process compared to a global average of 89 percent.
https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/europe/tu-shipbuilding.htm
Additional note: Turkey is on nowhere to compete with Korea-China-Japan trio in commercial shipbuilding, check total area of the shipyards in Turkey and compare it to a single Daewoo shipyard-which is large as a city and exceeds sum of Turkish shipyards' area and capacity. This is the reason why they focus on niche products. Sadly we dont spare enough for R&D on commercial shipbuilding, yet none of our shipyards are capable of conducting R&D (there used to be some, but not sure if they still exist). If i am not mistaken shipyards are categorized in 5
(if 6th Gen isnt categorized yet after Internet of Things or full automation). Only a few Turkish Shipyards are in 4th Gen, the rest is 3 or 2.
This is why Turkey needs to develop a commercial shipbuilding industry. Currently, what I understand is that Turkish shipbuilding industry mostly focuses on building yachts and repairing & servicing existing ships. A $1 billion export made by Turkish Shipbuilding industry is an impressive achievement. However, if you want a healthy defense industry that is capable of designing & building serious naval fleets at competitive prices, you need to build a sustainable shipbuilding industry.
Now Australia, the US and others can get away with it since the governments can basically babysit the entire industry with monies. Once the disgraced defense minister of Australia said that he wouldn't even trust the Australian shipbuilder, ASC to 'build a canoe'. It is true. ASC can't build a sh*t. (It doesn't mean Australia doesn't have advanced naval technologies) However, Australians understand that this is the best for our defense industry.
However, impoverished countries can't afford the same luxury. They have to do whatever it takes to help their shipbuilders to become bread winners & defense companies.
Austraila has Incat and Austal the two greatest Aliminum hull producers. Austal USA builds Independence Class LCS and they produce wave-piercing, high speed catamaran ferries. this is niche as much as building LNGs. Aliminum is a specialized field and not most of countries can go beyond a size. This the reason why Sweden can step up and have a great all-composite Visby Class. The reason why Korea constructs hull of Cruisers and deliver it bare-hull to European countries for furnishing.
Once the disgraced defense minister of Australia said that he wouldn't even trust the Australian shipbuilder, ASC to 'build a canoe'
LOL, whomever has seen construction site of any shipyard wouldnt trust them to build even a canoe, what those guys expect? Hospitals? Fighter Jet grade accurate production? Satellite production facilities?
. I have experienced such an event, in one of the best (or the biggest) shipyard, engineers has altered the handed out prints and constructed by removing some details, which were not important according to them. It happens in anywhere, the field engineers may take some initiative, ends up in a catastrophic way for the shipyard. However it happens, sort of like a daily life event in shipyards.
If he has spoken such for military vessels, Austraila can afford to get steel hull produced in anywhere abd equipping it in Australia. A shipyard is an heavy industry and developed countries tries to avoid it as much as possible by keeping strategic facilities alive like UK-Spain-Italy-France or US and morelikely Australia.