On Monday, 28 Oct , the shipyard announced that it had
signed a contract with China
Shipbuilding Trading Co and COSCO SHIPPING Lines to build six large
container ships each capable of carrying 13,600 20-foot equivalent units
(TEUs).The order was signed just 10 days
after the shipyard reached a similar deal to build six ships of the same type
for Canadian tonnage supplier Seaspan Corp.
The deals, among the largest container ship orders
signed in China this year, signal the currency’s steady expansion in the global
shipping market, further raising the yuan’s international recognition, analysts
said.
The 13,600-TEU container ship measures 336 meters in
length and has a maximum capacity of 14,096 TEUs, while providing sockets for
2,000 reefer containers. The settlement
in yuan comes after a series of similar cases in recent years, and it reflects
the Chinese shipbuilding industry’s rapid development and the yuan’s growing
international status.
The use of yuan settlement will help reduce exchange
risks and enhance the profitability of Chinese shipbuilders, raising their
market competitiveness, Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding Co said in a statement
sent to the Global Times on Monday. Such an arrangement will also reduce
financing costs and improve trade efficiency for shipowners, resulting in a
win-win situation.
The company said that, up to now, it has signed deals
for orders to build 21 vessels, of which yuan-based deals reached 15 billion
yuan ($2.1 billion), contributing to the internationalization of the currency.
Wu Minghua, a veteran shipping analyst, told the
Global Times on Monday that payments in yuan can expand the credit and loan
business between banks and companies, allowing financial institutions to better
support the real economy.
Ship
owners won’t be under so much pressure in expanding their fleets if limited
financial resources no longer constrain their ability to respond to market
demand, Wu said.
The payment in yuan is unprecedented, displaying the
currency’s growing financial value and expanding creditworthiness, Wu said.
China’s shipbuilding industry has maintained steady
growth this year with major metrics rising in the first three quarters, data
released by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology showed on
October 10. China secured more
than 70 percent of global green ship orders during the period, according to
China Central Television.