Hapag-Lloyd orders six giant LNG-powered container vessels at DSME

Germany’s Hapag-Lloyd has ordered six ultra large LNG-powered container vessels at South Korea’s Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering.

The order for the 23,500+ TEU vessels has a price tag of about $1 billion and Hapag-Lloyd said it already secured the financing.

Additionally, Daewoo will deliver the giant LNG-powered ships between April and December 2023.

Hapag-Lloyd will deploy the ships on the Europe – Far East routes as part of The Alliance, a shipping consortium consisting of the German liner, ONE, Yang Ming, and HMM.

The new vessels would “significantly increase Hapag-Lloyd´s competitiveness in this trade,” the liner said. 

Furthermore, the vessels will feature dual-fuel engines with LNG as the main fuel, but with sufficient tank capacity to operate on conventional fuel.

“With the investment in six ultra large container vessels we will not only be able to reduce slot costs and improve our competitiveness on the Europe – Far East trade, but also take a significant step forward in modernizing our fleet. Additionally we will further reduce our environmental impact,” Rolf Habben Jansen, CEO of Hapag-Lloyd said.

Huge boost for LNG as fuel

This order gives a huge boost to the LNG fueling industry as ship owners opt for chilled fuel to comply with the new IMO standards and slash emissions.

Hapag-Lloyd joins its peer CMA CGM that already operates four ultra large LNG-powered container vessels and will take delivery of five more from Chinese yards.

The CMA CGM 23,000 TEU giants currently hold the title of the world’s largest LNG-powered vessels. But Hapag-Lloyd’s could be even bigger, at least looking at the TEU size.

However, the German liner did not provide any specific information on the size of the LNG tank or the dual-fuel engines.

Also, this is not the first move in the LNG fueling segment for Hapag-Lloyd as the firm is already finalizing conversion works on its ultra-large containership Sajir.

China’s Huarun Dadong should soon complete the conversion of the 15,000 TEU Sajir.

Hapag-Lloyd claims the conversion is the first ever retrofit of a large containership to LNG fuel.

Most Popular

Yang Ming books LNG-powered containerships in South Korea

Taiwan’s Yang Ming Marine Transport has decided to order LNG dual-fuel container vessels from South Korea's Hanwha Ocean as part of its ongoing fleet optimization plan.

Sabah to take stake in Petronas’ third FLNG

SMJ Energy, owned by the Sabah government, has signed a heads of agreement with Malaysian energy giant Petronas to take a 25 percent stake in the latter's third floating LNG production unit.

Japan’s LNG imports drop in June

Japan’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports dropped by 2.8 percent in June compared to the same month last year, according to provisional data released by the country’s Ministry of Finance.

More News Like This

Yang Ming books LNG-powered containerships in South Korea

Taiwan’s Yang Ming Marine Transport has decided to order LNG dual-fuel container vessels from South Korea's Hanwha Ocean as part of its ongoing fleet optimization plan.

Hanwha Ocean to buld Korean LNG-powered icebreaker

South Korean shipbuilder Hanwha Ocean has secured a contract to build one LNG dual-fuel research icebreaker.

Hanwha Ocean expects LNG newbuild market to recover in second half

South Korean shipbuilder Hanwha Ocean expects the LNG newbuilding market to recover in the second half of this year due to new US LNG export projects.

Hanwha Ocean starts work on Nakilat’s LNG carrier

South Korean shipbuilder Hanwha Ocean has officially started building Nakilat's first of eight LNG carriers under the massive QatarEnergy shipbuilding program.