Turkey: A gloomy outlook on the horizon for the shipyards
-
A very tough year awaits the maritime construction industry. Many shipyard owners say they have received phone calls to cancel orders. Employment provided by the industry has contracted significantly. The government has also shut out the industry,
according to some. Complaining about the high cost of boutique
production, shipyards request incentives to help them focus on mass
productionSome players in the maritime construction industry in Turkey may have to fight for their lives in 2010.
Shipyards spent most of 2009 worrying about canceled orders. This trend
is expected to continue well into 2010. Most of 2009 was spent on
constructing back orders, and the industry received no new orders
during this year. Therefore, 2010 is expected to be the year of
“survival” for the maritime construction industry.“The crisis in the sea is expected to prolong,” said Birol ?ner, board
member of the Turkish Shipbuilders’ Association, or GİSBİR. “This year
we completed jobs delayed from a year earlier. 2010 will be a dark
year,” he said during a meeting held in Istanbul over the weekend.Foreign ship owners find boutique production costly, he said, adding that Turkey has to focus on mass production.
Distress over the industry has increased significantly as it has failed
to attain support from the government, said ?ner. “As a private sector,
we do all that we can, but we receive no support from the government.
We have never before been so distant from the government.“Are we supposed to deal with the crisis, create employment or deal
with the government?” he asked. “The government called off incentives
it was providing us. Employment declined to 8,000 from 35,000 in the
industry. Structural reform is a must,” said ?ner. “We have to jump in
the same ship as countries in the Far East, where ship construction
industries are focused on mass production.”The crisis has significant psychological effects, according to Salih
Zeki ?akır, chairman of the board of Sefine Tersanesi, a shipyard in
Yalova. “Businesspeople got cold feet for this industry. We have not
received any new orders. The phone calls we get are to cancel orders,”
he said. “Four out of six orders to the Sefine shipyard have been
canceled.”Trust in management of the economy has declined significantly,
according to Doğan Cansızlar, former chairman of the Capital Markets
Board. “Economy management is the management of expectations,” he said.“If you cause an increase in uncertainties related to the future, you
are unable to manage correctly. The government has been engaged in
talks with the International Monetary Fund for the past year or so. I
have never seen such a long period of talks,” he said. “We have become
the fastest contracting country of the world. We turned a blind eye to
the global crisis and declared a 2008 end-of-the-year budget growth of
4 percent. The perception was all wrong.”Even layoffs could not prevent fatal accidents*
With the Dec. 6 death of contract worker Ercan Sancar, the number of
workplace fatalities in Tuzla shipyards rose to 10 this year, and the
total number rose to 14, despite dramatic downsizing in the sector.The total number of deaths this year has surpassed the total number of
fatalities in 2007, 2006 and 2005, when the sector employed more than
40,000 workers, as opposed to roughly 10,000 workers today.According to data from the Turkish Shipbuilders’ Association, or
GİSBİR, the entire shipbuilding sector employed 25,923 workers as of
November. The figure stood at 33,490 in August, but the real number of
workers was predicted to be way above these figures.According to Murat Bayrak, the GİSBİR chief, around 8,000 workers were
employed at Tuzla shipyards in December, while the number of workers
for the whole sector retreated to roughly 10,000.Despite these numbers, 14 shipyard workers died in workplace accidents
this year, 10 of them in Tuzla, two in Kocaeli and the others in
Zonguldak and Aliağa. All of them were contract workers.According to data from the Limter-İş labor union, 12 workers died in
2007, while 10 died in 2006 and 13 died in 2005. Only last year
surpassed all previous numbers of deaths, with 29 workplace fatalities,
19 of them in Tuzla.“In the past, the deaths were justified by overproduction, lack of
space or lack of training,” said Kamber Saygılı, the Limter-İş
secretary-general. “With the crisis, all of these justifications have
disappeared. The number of workers is down. They were saying 17,000
workers had received training certificates. If the number of workers is
down to 10,000, this means there are no untrained workers. But the
deaths are rising.”Saygılı said the real reason for the escalation was the abolishment of safety codes due to the crisis.
Source: Hurriyet Daily News
Search to find what you want
Loading- Ship-feared job cuts
- Unemployment threatens about Finnish shipyards
- Korean shipyards share revenue targets for 2010
- S. Korea yards Winning Projects continues overseas
- South Korea: Shipbuilding Industry Is Heading for Crisis?
- Tuzla shipyards in distress situations, such as orders dry up
- Meridian dockworkers strike
- Australian Maritime Strike threatens the economy – ACCI
- Dockworkers plan to strike from 4th January
- Two new contracts for offshore Iceland
- Daewoo sets sail with a lot to build five ships to
- Fingerprint ID for port workers in Australia
- Schat-Harding has a rise in orders lifeboat
- Dockers strike cripples Bangladesh in Chittagong Port
- Bangladeshi ship breakers protest new standards
South Korea has remained the world’s largest ship maker this year, but concerns are mounting that a number of medium- and small-sized firms may go for huge restructuring next year, shedding jobs. SLS shipbuilding, the nation’s eighth-largest maker, filed Sunday for a bankruptcy prevention program. The smaller-sized 21st Century Shipbuilding
Many of the 5,000 employees and subcontractors at the STX shipyard in the southwestern city of Turku are worried about what will happen to their jobs after the Oasis and her sister ship are delivered amidst a sharp downturn in the industry. “The mood at the shipyard is pretty low.
South Korean shipbuilders have been announcing their sales targets for 2010. Hyundai Heavy Industries Co., the world’s leading shipbuilder, said Monday that it aims to win US$17.7 billion worth of orders this year. That follows a December 31, 2009 announcement by the company that it had won orders valued at
Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering (DSME), the world’s second-largest shipbuilder, and Sungdong Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering (SSME) have taken up over 50 percent of orders of the market since November 2009. Domestic ship builders are busy winning orders internationally amid sluggishness in shipbuilding
The Wall Street Journal reported this week that the Korean shipbuilding industry will suffer lean times and tough restructuring measures until 2012 due to a sharp decrease in the number of ship orders resulting from the global economic crisis. But industry sources in Korea say that the worst is over,
Pre-crisis, the Tuzla shipyards were building 150 ships each year, but as global trade screeched to a halt the shipyard zone has been pulled into toward economic paralysis. Last year, the shipyards, located at the southern tip of Istanbul, saw production plummet by 90 percent while employment declined 75 percent.
Workers of the Meridian Port Services at the Tema Port are on a sit-down strike, to back their demand for better working conditions.
A series of labor strikes at Australian shipping companies servicing the oil and gas sector are a “national economic threat,” the? said Monday. Members of the Maritime Union have stopped work a number of times since November to demand increased wages, impacting the operations of companies such as Woodside Petroleum
Five federations representing more than 60,000 port and dock workers in 12 major ports in the country have decided to go on strike from January 4 after their workers failed to settle wage disputes with managements. “Talks between the Indian Ports Association and the representatives of all recognised unions have
Norway’s Island Offshore has ordered two platform supply vessels to be built at STX Europe in Brevik, injecting a much-needed boost into the shipbuilding industry after a prolonged dearth of newbuild orders. Based on the same design as Island Commander… Read at Two new orders for Island Offshore
Korea’s shipbuilding industry got some rare good news yesterday as Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering Co. said it won an order to build five oil tankers for Angola’s state-owned oil company
Australia’s port workers could undergo mandatory fingerprinting under recommendations from law enforcement agencies to the federal government. Read at Fingerprint ID for port workers in Australia
Despite a rapidly contracting global shipbuilding orderbook, the world’s leading lifeboat and davit manufacturer, Schat-Harding, has secured a healthy $10.6m of orders for new equipment in the last three months.
Work at Bangladesh’s busy Chittagong Port came to a standstill today as dock workers observed a strike demanding reinstatement of about 2,200 fellow workers, terminated during the past military-backed interim government. Port officials said the dock workers stopped loading and unloading of goods in 13 general cargo berths since morning.
Bangladesh’s ship breaking yards ground to a halt Monday as some 30,000 workers protested a government decree aimed at improving environmental standards in the industry, police said. Under a government order issued in late January said, ships heading for breaking yards must now be certified as toxic chemical-free before they
Loading...
