Shipbuilding: Container Ship Order Book Soars to New Heights

“At the end of 2024, the container ship order book was 8.3m TEU, a new record compared with the previous high of 7.8m TEU in early 2023,” says Niels Rasmussen, Chief Shipping Analyst at BIMCO.

Shipbuilding: Container Ship Order Book Soars to New Heights
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“At the end of 2024, the container ship order book was 8.3m TEU, a new record compared with the previous high of 7.8m TEU in early 2023,” says Niels Rasmussen, Chief Shipping Analyst at BIMCO.

As 4.4m TEU were contracted during 2024, the second highest ever, the order book grew despite deliveries hitting a new record high of 2.9m TEU.

“Making up 92% of the order book capacity, ships 8k TEU or larger dominate the order book. The largest segment, 12-17k TEU, makes up 46% of the order book capacity,” says Rasmussen.

Shipyards in China have benefitted the most from the last four years’ contracting boom and currently hold 72% of the order book’s 8.3m TEU while South Korean and Japanese shipyards hold 22% and 5% respectively.

Liner operators control 79% of the order book capacity, significantly higher than the 61% they control of the fleet capacity. Having already increased from 56% at the beginning of 2019, liner operators’ share of fleet capacity is therefore set to continue growing in the coming years.

Though five ships have already been contracted for delivery in 2030, 99% of the order book will be delivered during 2025-2029. According to the current delivery schedule, 0.7m TEU will be delivered in 2029 while an average of 1.9m TEU will be delivered during 2025-2028, peaking at 2.2m TEU in 2027.

As recycling of ships during the past four years has been limited to 166 ships and 256k TEU, the average age of the fleet has increased 1.4 years since the beginning of 2020. Consequently, the number of ships 20 years old or older has risen, and they now make up 3.4m TEU equal to 11% of the fleet.

If all ships 20 years old or older are recycled during the next five years, the fleet will grow to 35.8m TEU by end 2029, assuming no more ships are contracted for delivery before 2030. That is equal to 16% growth or average annual growth of 3%. The segments smaller than 8k TEU would see an average annual contraction of 4% while the segments 8k TEU or larger would grow on average 7% per year.

“It would require 680k TEU per year to recycle all ships 20 years old or older during the next five years (the current annual record is 657k TEU) but actual recycling is likely to end lower. As long as ships cannot fully return to the Red Sea, recycling will likely continue to be low and at the same time the smaller ship segments tend to be recycled later than average. Therefore, average annual fleet growth during the next five years could end higher than 3%,” says Rasmussen.

#END News
source: marinelink
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