Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
ePaper

Clasic Farm

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Shipping
Corporate - Diversification
Logistics - Outlook
Get Latest BSE Quote
L&T looking at integrated port-shipyard facility

Anil Sasi
Mamuni Das

Open to having `small participation' from other players


Thrust area
The company is likely to take a decision by May-end on the location of the facility
The proposed shipyard is being billed as India's largest

New Delhi May 22 Engineering and construction major Larsen & Toubro plans to broaden the scope of its proposed Rs 2,000-crore mega greenfield shipyard in favour of an integrated port-cum-shipyard facility.

The company, which has been actively looking at three locations for setting up the facility, now plans to go in for an integrated facility, instead of only a shipyard, in light of cost implications of constructing a breakwater facility.

"We are now looking at a shipyard-plus-port facility... We need to invest quite a bit in a breakwater facility and it makes sense that the cost be shared by a port and a shipyard," L&T's President-Construction and Board Member, Mr K. V. Rangaswami, told Business Line.

Majority Equity

Breakwaters are structures constructed on coasts as part of coastal defence or to protect an anchorage from the effects of weather and longshore drift.

Mr Rangaswami said the company is likely to take a decision by May-end on the location of the facility.

The company has been looking at three separate locations — near Chennai in Tamil Nadu, Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh and Mundra in Gujarat — for up to 1,200 acres of land to set up the facility. L&T, which plans to retain majority equity in the venture, is open to having a "small participation" from other players, he said.

The proposed shipyard is being billed as India's largest and the only one that would be equipped to build big-sized carriers such as very large crude carriers with capacities of up to 3-3.5 lakh dead weight tonnage (dwt). Currently, of the 20-odd shipyards in the country, the Cochin Shipyard's facility in Kochi is among the largest and can build vessels of up to 1.1 lakh dwt. L&T has forayed into shipbuilding as a major thrust area for future growth, with a new shipyard at Hazira marking the beginning of the strategic initiative.

The company laid the keel for the first ship within 17 weeks of commencing operations at its Hazira shipbuilding yard in January this year. Detailed expansion plans for the Hazira Shipyard involve expanding capacity to construct eight vessels up to 20,000 dwt per annum.

It had marked its entry into this field in April 2006 by securing an order from the Netherlands-based Rolldock (earlier Zadeko Ship Management) for four heavy lift semi-submersible cargo ships.

The Government has announced plans to set up two international standard shipyards in the country, one each on the East and the West coast.

Related Stories:
L&T to set up Rs 2,000-cr shipyard
L&T forays into shipbuilding

More Stories on : Shipping | Diversification | Outlook | Larsen & Toubro Ltd

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Hiring

Stories in this Section
Monsoon onset window may get stretched


Panel on health insurance for senior citizens formed
RCom studying market for making handsets
Govt to unveil `major initiative' on farm front
AAI entrusted with Chennai airport expansion
Oil cos: Rupee gain softens impact of crude prices
Reliance setting up pharma unit at Jamnagar SEZ
L&T looking at integrated port-shipyard facility
Tata Tea scrip surges on Coke interest in Glaceau
Ceat firming up plans for two greenfield facilities
Ten Sports exploring new revenue options
Select funds raise exposure to financial services
Mines row: SAIL, Jharkhand may settle out of court
Property tax paid to local bodies allowed as deduction
New gas find reports fuel Reliance Industries
Foreign investments - value subtracting?


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2007, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line