HD Hyundai Heavy Industries LNG carrier (File photo, courtesy of HD Hyundai) DOHA -- HD Hyundai Heavy Industries Co., the world’s second-largest shipyard, has won a $3.9 billion deal to build 17 liquified natural gas carriers for Qatar, the largest single contract in the South Korean shipbuilding industry.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Qatar Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani on Wednesday announced the deal between HD Hyundai and state-owned QatarEnergy after their summit in Doha.
“HD Hyundai has secured work for a half year with the deal,” said Choi Sang-mok, senior presidential secretary for economic affairs. “Hanwha Ocean and Samsung Heavy Industries are in talks on prices for an additional 30 tankers, which are expected to bring us even greater fruits soon.”
Yoon and Tamim agreed to escalate the two nations’ relationship to a comprehensive strategic partnership. The leaders expanded their sectors of cooperation to encompass stable LNG procurement, LNG tanker operation and maintenance, as well as agricultural technology and defense.
The two governments and companies in the countries signed 12 deals and memorandums of understanding totaling $4.6 billion -- including HD Hyundai’s contract -- for smart farms, solar power, self-driving cars, cultural content, and the medical and financial sectors.
Qatar in 2008 unveiled a long-term goal to reduce its dependence on oil by 2030 and diversify its economic structure. As a part of Qatar National Vision 2030, the country aims to increase its LNG production capacity to 126 million tons a year by 2027 from the current 77 million tons through the North Field expansion project, which will require more vessels.
QatarEnergy ordered 65 LNG carriers last year, of which South Korean shipbuilders won deals for 54 vessels and Chinese companies took the rest.
The state-owned company formerly known as Qatar Petroleum has been placing more orders this year for tankers, including the 17 ships won by HD Hyundai. The number will swell further with the 30 vessels targeted by Hanwha and Samsung. HD Hyundai plans to build those carriers in its yard in Ulsan, about 400 kilometers southeast of Seoul, and deliver them from 2027 in stages.
South Korean shipbuilders have swept 81% of orders for LNG carriers across the world so far this year with HD Hyundai’s deal in Qatar. If Hanwha, formerly Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co., and Samsung ink contracts for the 30 tankers, South Korean companies’ share in the market is expected to rise to 90%.
HD Hyundai’s parent HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering Co., Hanwha and Samsung have been working to win vessel orders since the Qatari government started the LNG project in 2020.
The price of vessel orders won by HD Hyundai have averaged at $229.4 million, about 13% lower than the recent price of a new LNG tanker.
HD Hyundai may have had difficulties in reflecting higher raw material costs to vessel prices as it signed a provisional contract with QatarEnergy, industry sources in Seoul said.
The South Korean company is still unlikely to face lower profitability as such a massive deal is expected to cut costs, those sources said.
“Shipbuilders usually have to design vessels differently to meet customer needs for each project. But the Qatari contract will help HD Hyundai reduce expenses for design and material procurements, given the size of the deal,” said a source.
“The LNG cooperation between the two countries is expanding to other businesses such as LNG tanker building, vessel operation and maintenance from LNG procurement, which dominated the past 20 years,” said Choi.
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