MARITIME 2000
European Yards Look To 'Formula'
To Compete With Their Far East Counterparts
Judging from what was said at the
Round Table organized by the Asso-
ciation of Marine Architects and
Naval Engineers of Spain (AINE),
held recently in Madrid, the Euro-
pean shipyards have found the
formula that will enable them to
compete successfully with their Far
Eastern counterparts, and they are
now putting it to work. This consists
mainly of a radical new approach to
production systems.
The language used by the chief
executives of the large European
shipyards seems to have changed a
great deal over the last year or two.
Instead of insisting on the absolute
necessity for subsidies in order to
withstand the competition from the
giants of the Far East, talk centers
around just how to win over the
market without subsidizing the final
product. The answer appears to be:
(1) generous R&D investments in-
tended to redesign the production
process by incorporating mass-pro-
duction techniques like those em-
ployed by other industries; (2) inter-
yard cooperation, involving the ex-
change of technologies and joint de-
velopment of new prototypes; and
(3) rationalization of management
and statistical control of produc-
tion.
Even so, practically everyone was
in agreement that at least minimum
subsidies would have to continue
being applied until the shipyards as
a whole are able to reap the benefits
of their investments in technological
renovation and can put more com-
petitive production processes in full
operation.
Juan Saez Elegido, marine en-
gineer, appointed president of the
public group Astilleros Espanoles
just a few months ago, is a key parti-
cipant in this "new style of Euro-
pean shipbuilding." The Spanish
yard has achieved important ad-
vances in productivity. Perhaps the
culmination of its ever-expanding
market are the spectacular cruise
ship conversion and newbuilding
contracts it has recently signed.
Mr. Saez proposes to invest $120
million in a three-year plan covering
1990-92 (exactly twice the amount
invested in the previous three-year
period) to transform production
from functional systems to zones
and stages. A key measure will be to
devote 1.5 million hours ("the time
it takes us to make two and a half oil
tankers") to personnel training.
Kurt Andersen, president of
Odense Steel Shipyard, affirmed
that his yard has spent a decade
readying itself to compete with any
other builder in the world. The yard
also allocates substantial invest-
ments to production equipment and
management information systems,
WORM) ORDER BOOK MARCH 1987 - SEPTEMBER 1990
Showing All Ships and Tankers
r 87 Jun 87 Sep 87 Dec 87 M;
1 ft * f , > ^ >
U J* -
Principals shown above during the conference are. left to right: Anthony Morral. general
directorate of industry and internal market of the European Communities Commission;
Kurt Andersen, president of Odense Steel Shipyard; Juan Antonio Alcaraz, president of
AINE; Juan S^ez Elegido. president of Astilleros Espanoles; Jos6 Luis Cerezo. technical
secretary of shipbuilding management of the Spanish Ministry of Industry; Enrique Kaibel.
president of Sercobe; Jos6 Esteban P6rez. vice president of AINE, and moderator.
TABLE 1
LEADING SHIPBUILDING COUNTRIES
TOTAL ORDER BOOK
Gross tonnage
Japan 15,118,058
South Korea 8.911.316
People's Republic of China 1,151,003
Taiwan 909,200
Denmark 1,694,513
Yugoslavia 1,559,578
West Germany 1.508,329
Italy 1,339.456
Spain 1,281,062
Brazil 1.172,943
Poland 1,127,342
East Germany 782,959
! Romania 671,790
United Kingdom 635,696
Finland 477,069
Norway 362,460
Turkey 319,002
'Information incomplete
and these are generating savings
that are used to finance further
improvements.
Much attention is also given to
what Mr. Andersen calls "non-
quantifiable" productivity factors
(improved order, heightened moti-
vation, zero task duplication).
Above all, the yard makes a policy of
producing ships in series: "We are
not currently accepting orders to
build a single unit of one design."
Jose Luis Cerezo, Technical
Secretary General of the Manage-
ment of the Marine Sector (pertain-
ing to the Spanish Ministry of In-
dustry), pointed out that the invest-
ment of the Spanish yards in R&D
($40 million by private yards and
$60 million by public ones over
XX Sep 88 Dec 88 Mar 89 Jun Sep 89 Dec 89 Mar 90 Jun 90 Sep 90
1987-89), has given rise to spectacu-
lar increments in productivity, but
this is only the first phase of the
process. The coming phase, which
requires much greater outlays, will
be the one that enables the Spanish
yards to compete successfully with
their Japanese and Korean col-
leagues. This one, described in de-
tail by Mr. Cerezo, will imply a
total renovation of the production
process.
But despite their recent gains in
productivity, both Spain and Den-
mark, two of the more successful
shipbuilding countries in Europe,
trail Japan and South Korea by a
substantial margin in tonnage under
construction and on order.
According to the latest quarterly
shipbuilding figures, the Far East
once again dominated the list of
shipbuilding countries.
With the world orderbook at its
highest level since September 1977,
totaling 41.6 million gross tons, Ja-
pan increased both its total order-
book, from 13.2 million gt to 15.1
million gt, and its lead over South
Korea, whose orderbook fell from
9.8 million gt to 8.9 million gt at the
end of the third quarter this year.
As detailed in Table 1, the
People's Republic of China and Tai-
wan took third behind South Korea,
followed by Denmark, Yugoslavia,
West Germany, Italy, Spain, Brazil,
Poland, East Germany, Romania,
United Kingdom, Finland, Norway
and Turkey.
However, the end September po-
sition changed dramatically, as did
the world for that matter, on Octo-
ber 3 when the unification of the
two Germanys resulted in a com-
bined tonnage orderbook of 2.3 mil-
lion gt, putting it in third place after
Japan and Korea.
16 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News
Digital Wave Publishing