Editorial:
Europe needs an offensive shipbuilding strategy
Shipbuilding is a risky, capital intense
business so why risk taxpayers money in
an effort to save an industry producing things others apparently can
produce a lot cheaper?
Europes shipbuilding industry is struggling and
the downhill trend is accelerating. In 2002, European shipyards delivered
about one fifth of all new ships over 30,000 DWT, but was only awarded
just over 10 per cent of the new orders, measured in CGT.
Something
has to be done to change the trend if European shipbuilding is to survive.
The only significant action taken today is the EU Commissions
complaint to WTO, accusing South Korean shipyards for un-fair pricing
and the re-introduction of a six per cent subsidy for certain vessel
types.
Even
if South Korean shipyards have a number of skeletons in their financial
closet, the action has a certain scent of the classic lets
find an outer enemy to blame for our own failures. The main reasons
for the demise of the European shipbuilding industry lies here with
us.
It
is also an industry far to complex for a one-and-for-all
solution.
General
shipyards competing in the global arena for orders of all ship types
face the competition from the efficient large-scale South Korean shipyards
as well as from shipyards in low-cost countries like China. This can
probably only be met by continued consolidation and possibly also closures
and re-locations to achieve economy-of-scale advantages, and improved
work organisations. Shipyards specialised towards high-value vessels
like cruise ships face a high degree of competition from other European
shipyards. Their main problem is that there are too few potential orders
(or too many competitors) in the marketplace today.
Smaller
shipyards work mainly in a regional European market, often having long-term
relationships with the orderers. In this market shipyards in the West
have a competitive disadvantage towards the shipyards in the East of
Europe. Western shipyards tries to compensate the cost difference by
ordering hulls in the East for completion in the West. In the long run,
this will only mean that competitive advantages for the Western shipyards
as knowledge, experience and work organisation also will flow from West
to East, adding to the Eastern shipyards competitiveness. To survive,
the shipyards in West must become more cost-effective. Therefore the
on-going consolidation will continue. Re-locations and concentration
of resources are also likely.
Shipyards
are work intense and often have an enormous impact locally and nationally.
Restructuring of this industry is a politically hot potato but more
than traditional measures and general subsidies, we need a long-term
and offensive strategy developed by the society and the industry together.
Now,
why bother? Shipbuilding is a risky, capital intense business so why
risk taxpayers money in an effort to save an industry producing
things others apparently can produce a lot cheaper?
The
answer is simple. Maritime transportation is essential for the development
of the European society. Ships transport more than 90 per cent of the
EU foreign trade. The intra EU-trade depends on the development of seaborne
transport systems for many reasons, not least environmental. Without
a strong shipbuilding industry, Europe will in the long run loose competence,
research institutions, marine equipment developers and not least the
initiative in the development of environmentally friendly and cost effective
maritime transport systems. The fact that shipbuilding creates a lot
of jobs at the shipyards and with the suppliers and sub-contractors
are just bonuses.
Rolf Petrén Nilsson
Editor-in-Chief