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Shipbuilder headquartered in Kaohsiung, Taiwan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CSBC Corporation, Taiwan (Chinese: 台灣國際造船; pinyin: Táiwān Guójì Zàochuán, literally "Taiwan International Shipbuilding Corporation") is a company that produces ships for civilian and military use in Taiwan. It is headquartered in Kaohsiung, with shipyards in Kaohsiung and Keelung. For decades it was a state-owned enterprise which also produced commercial vessels for foreign customers. it was privatized in 2008, involving an IPO.
Native name | 台灣國際造船股份有限公司 |
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Company type | Public |
TWSE: 2208 | |
Industry | Shipbuilding |
Founded | 1937 |
Headquarters | Siaogang, Kaohsiung, Taiwan |
Key people |
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Owner | Ministry of Economic Affairs (22.21%) |
Website | www.csbcnet.com.tw |
CSBC Corporation, Taiwan | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 台灣國際造船 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 台湾国际造船 | ||||||
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Full name | |||||||
Traditional Chinese | 台灣國際造船股份有限公司 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 台湾国际造船股份有限公司 | ||||||
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In 2021 government and naval vessels accounted for 60% of CSBC’s operations.[1]
As of 2019 ship repair accounted for 3–5% of CSBC revenues, with the company working to increase that share because of favorable margins in the space.[2]
In 2019 CSBC Corp. completed a green retrofit of a 13,000 TEU container ship owned by Orient Overseas Container Line. Modifications included a flue gas desulfurization system to bring the ship into compliance with United Nations IMO 2020 emissions goals.[3]
CSBC Corporation, Taiwan, formerly known as China Shipbuilding Corporation (CSBC, Chinese: 中國造船; pinyin: Zhōngguó Zàochuán), is the result of the merger of Taiwan Shipbuilding Corporation and China Shipbuilding Corporation.
Shipbuilding in Taiwan began in 1937 during the Japanese colonial period when Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Corporation founded the Taiwan Dockyard Corporation. Following Japan's defeat in World War II, the Republic of China authorities established Taiwan Machinery and Shipbuilding Company by merging the existing Taiwan Dockyard Corporation with Taiwan Steel Works and Tōkō Kōgyō Corporation. Two years later, in 1948, the company split into two state-owned companies called Taiwan Machinery Corporation and Taiwan Shipbuilding Corporation (TSBC).
China Shipbuilding Corporation (CSBC) was founded in 1973 and reverted to a government-owned company in 1977. CSBC and TSBC merged in 1978 and was known as China Shipbuilding Corporation until 2007.[4]
On 9 February 2007, the board approved the name change to CSBC Corporation, Taiwan.[5] Critics argued that the name change was another case of Chen Shui-bian's de-Sinicization act, while proponents argued that the name change would help to avoid potential confusion with the People's Republic of China.[6] In 2008 CSBC’s production value reached 1.131b USD, 54% of Taiwan’s total shipbuilding industry output for that year.[7]
According to its website, the company has built container ships, one-of-a-kind commercial ships and semi-submersible heavy-lift transport ships, including the MV Blue Marlin. Furthermore, it has built ships, submarines and advanced naval weapons for the Republic of China Navy, patrol vessels for the Coast Guard Administration, and research vessels for the Taiwan Ocean Research Institute.[8] CSBC is participating in the development of the first domestic Taiwanese AUV.[9]
In 2018 CSBC entered into an alliance with Yang Ming Marine Transport Corporation, Taiwan Navigation Co Ltd, and Taiwan International Ports Corporation to provide marine services to Taiwan's burgeoning offshore wind power sector.[10] CSBC has a joint venture with DEME Wind Engineering to offer wind farm construction in East Asia. In 2019 they were hired by Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners to transport and install wind turbines at two new wind farm off Taiwan.[11] The two wind farms have a combined capacity of 600MW and are expected to be completed by 2023.[12]
CSBC has been contracted to build eight conventional attack submarines for the Republic of China Navy.[13] The model featured an X-form rudder.[14] The initial project contract is for US$3.3 billion with projected procurement costs of US$10bn for a fleet of ten boats.[15]
CSBC is set to deliver ten 2,800 TEU container vessels to Yang Ming Marine Transport Corporation between January 2020 and February 2021.[16][17]
In July 2019 CSBC launched the CSBC No. 15, a barge designed to support CSBC’s offshore wind power business. The barge has a loading capacity of 23,000 metric tons and a loading deck bearing strength 20 metric tons per square meter. It is 41 meters wide by 140 meters long and cost NT$700 million to build.[18]
In October 2021 CSBC launched the YM Cooperation for Yang Ming Marine Transport Corporation, the 2,940 TEU containership has a high level of modularity and environmental sustainability.[19]
In September 2023, CSBC launched Taiwan's first domestically built submarine Haikun(Chinese: 海鯤) at its shipyard in Kaohsiung. The event was presided over by Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen.[20]
CSBC and one of its ships is featured in episode two of the National Geographic Channel’s Superstructures: Engineering Marvels.[21]
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