Taiwanese Bulk Shipping Company Inks Contract With Tsuneishi Shipbuilding

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  • A pair of 64,000 dwt bulkers have been booked for around $70 million by the Taipei-based owner.
  • This order’s delivery dates have yet to be revealed.
  • Wisdom Marine, a Taiwanese bulk shipping company, has made a $102 million contract with Tsuneishi Shipbuilding for three kamsarmax bulk carriers.
  • The new build trio, which is part of Wisdom Marine’s fleet optimization effort, has not yet been delivered.
  • It just received the Onomichi Dockyard-built handy bulker Bunun Power.

Taiwanese bulk shipping operator Wisdom Marine has returned to Imabari Shipbuilding with an order for two Ultramax newbuilds as reported by Splash.

Wisdom marine

A pair of 64,000 dwt bulkers have been booked for around $70 million by the Taipei-based owner.

This order’s delivery dates have yet to be revealed. Wisdom ordered two handysize bulk carriers for $29 million apiece from the same Japanese shipyard earlier this year, with delivery slated for 2023.

In July and September, the business also booked four ships of equal tonnage split between two Japanese shipyards, Namura Shipbuilding and Onomichi Dockyard, for a total of $114 million.

Wisdom Marine currently has a fleet of 133 vessels and 16 ships on order from various Japanese yards, including a trio of kamsarmax ships from Tsuneishi Shipbuilding.

Bulk carrier contract

Wisdom Marine, a Taiwanese bulk shipping company, has made a $102 million contract with Tsuneishi Shipbuilding for three kamsarmax bulk carriers.

Last year, the company received an order for an 82,000 dwt kamsarmax pair, which will be delivered in September 2022.

The new build trio, which is part of Wisdom Marine’s fleet optimization effort, has not yet been delivered.

To satisfy future energy efficiency standards, Wisdom Marine is planning to grow its fleet of eco-ships. It just received the Onomichi Dockyard-built handy bulker Bunun Power.

The Taipei-based corporation now operates a fleet of 133 ships and has 10 more on the way from Japanese yards.

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Source: Splash