Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Shipbuilding Co., Ltd., a Group company of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.
(MHI), has received its very first order from Astomos Energy Corporation for a
very large liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) carrier. MHI Shipbuilding Co. Ltd works
on the construction of both LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) and LPG carriers. It aims at ensuring
efficiency by chain management reforms and a streamlined process, in which
there would be a constant supply of the same vessel type.
The order marks the very first to be
received by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Shipbuilding since the company's launch
on October 1 2015. The LPG carrier on order is identical to the four vessels
Astomos Energy has already ordered to MHI since 2013. The ship provides the
world's highest level of energy-saving performance, flexibility to accommodate
major LPG terminals around the globe, and specifications suited to passage
through the newly expanding Panama Canal. Completion and delivery are scheduled
for the fourth quarter of 2018.
The LPG carrier newly
ordered to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Shipbuilding will measure 230.0 meters
(m) in length overall (LOA), 36.6m in width and 11.1m in draft, with gross
tonnage of 48,300 tons (t) and deadweight tonnage of 51,100t. It will have
capacity to carry up to 83,000 cubic meters (m3) of LPG. The adoption of MHI's
unique hull design and other features will provide the carrier with superlative
fuel efficiency and outstanding adaptability to the diverse connecting
conditions of the world's LPG terminals. The ship will also be equipped with
the industry's most advanced systems, including mooring arrangement, to enable
passage through the newly expanding Panama Canal, which is expected to become
operable in the first half of 2016.
Besides the newly
ordered carrier, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Shipbuilding will also build or
complete the four ships previously ordered by Astomos Energy to MHI.
Astomos Energy
presently operates a fleet of 21 very large LPG carriers. All six vessels owned
by the company and 10 of the company's 15 time-chartered vessels were built by
MHI at the Nagasaki Shipyard. Currently Astomos Energy, in its new medium-term
business plan beginning in fiscal 2015, is targeting expansion of its LPG transport
structure and an increase in its gross LPG handling volume from the current 10
million tons per year (mtpy) to more than 12mtpy by 2017. The order newly
placed to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Shipbuilding is an integral part of that
initiative. The new carrier, when completed, will replace a vessel owned by
Astomos Energy that was built in the early 1990s.
With the emergence of
the "shale gas revolution" in the United States, demand for LPG
produced in North America is projected to increase over the medium to long term
in markets worldwide, including East Asia. In tandem with this expansionary
trend, coupled with the enlargement of the Panama Canal, newly constructed
ships must offer increased carrying capacities and be able to transport over
longer distances. They must also perform to tightening environmental
restrictions imposed on such ship navigations. The LPG carrier newly ordered by
Astomos Energy to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Shipbuilding will satisfy these
various requirements and simultaneously meet the needs of the company's plan to
build the world's most advanced LPG carrier fleet.
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd (MHI) is Japanese multinational
engineering electrical equipment, and Electronics Company headquartered in
Tokyo Japan.
MHI Hull Production
Co. Ltd is responsible for the manufacture of the hull blocks for these vessels.
MHI Hull Production also ensures efficiency through production streamlining and
the continuous production of identical hulls. The company aims at increasing
production by selling its hull blocks to other shipyards.
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