According to www.livemint.com, India is executing its most ambitious shipbuilding strategy to date — targeting global hub status through coordinated infrastructure investment, financial incentives, and export-oriented capacity expansion.
Strategic Timing and Geopolitical Opportunity
India’s renewed push into maritime manufacturing is driven by three converging forces: shifting geopolitical dynamics, global supply chain diversification efforts, and the nation’s broader ambition to become a top-tier manufacturing economy. Currently, India accounts for less than 1% of global shipbuilding output — a market dominated by China, South Korea, and Japan. With commercial vessel demand remaining robust and international shipping firms actively seeking alternative production bases, New Delhi sees a timely opening. Shipbuilding also aligns with national industrial goals: it generates high-skilled employment, strengthens domestic steel and engineering sectors, boosts exports, enhances maritime security, and reduces reliance on imported vessels.
Export Orders Signal Growing Confidence
International customers are increasingly awarding contracts to Indian yards. Cochin Shipyard Ltd (CSL), a state-owned enterprise, secured an order from French shipping giant CMA CGM to construct six feeder container vessels, each with a capacity of approximately 1,700 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU). Though the contract value remains undisclosed, it represents one of the largest commercial export wins for an Indian shipbuilder to date.
Private sector players are also gaining traction: Swan Defence & Heavy Industries won orders for six specialized chemical tankers from Norwegian firm Rederiet Stenersen and four Kamsarmax bulk carriers from New Energy One (NEO), an investment fund registered in the Jerry Channel Islands focused on green assets. Domestically, Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Ltd received a ₹330 crore order from the Shipping Corporation of India for a methanol-dual-fuel platform supply vessel — underscoring India’s commitment to low-carbon maritime technologies.
Expanding Technical Capabilities
Indian shipyards have moved beyond small and medium vessels to deliver increasingly complex commercial ships. Current capabilities include feeder container vessels, chemical and product tankers, Kamsarmax bulk carriers, offshore platform supply vessels, anchor-handling tugs, dredgers, LPG carriers, and very large gas carriers (VLGCs). The government reports that demand aggregation has already identified a one-year procurement pipeline of 62 vessels across multiple categories. Engineering major Larsen and Toubro Ltd has entered commercial shipbuilding tenders covering platform supply vessels, medium-range tankers, container vessels, and VLGCs — signaling broader industrial participation.
Financial Architecture and Incentives
To overcome historically high financing costs, India has deployed a multi-layered funding framework. The revamped Shipbuilding Financial Assistance Scheme (SBFAS), launched in September 2025, has drawn 36 applications covering contracts worth approximately ₹8,000 crore, with eligible government assistance estimated at over ₹1,700 crore. Under the broader Maritime Development Fund (MDF), the government has earmarked ₹25,000 crore for financial aid between FY26 and FY36. This includes a proposed ₹20,000 crore Maritime Investment Fund — potentially expandable to ₹30,000 crore with private participation — and a ₹5,000 crore Interest Incentivization Fund to reduce borrowing costs for maritime projects.
Greenfield Clusters and Capacity Buildout
India’s physical capacity expansion is the most ambitious pillar of its strategy. In-principle approval has been granted for two greenfield shipbuilding clusters: one in Thoothukudi, Tamil Nadu, spanning over 2,000 acres and designed to build vessels up to 300,000 deadweight tonnes (DWT); and another in Dugarajapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, covering roughly 2,700 acres with planned annual capacity of 1.2 million gross tonnage (GT). Tamil Nadu signed a memorandum of understanding with HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering to develop what could become India’s largest yard — targeting 2.5 million GT annually. Three additional locations — Kuchadi in Gujarat, Dighi in Maharashtra, and Kendrapada in Odisha — have been identified for future clusters. Overall, the government estimates total investment of ₹9,930 crore for these greenfield hubs, including breakwaters, basins, and shared maritime industrial infrastructure.
Existing yards are also scaling up: Swan Defence plans to expand its Pipavav facility; Titagarh Naval Systems is developing a new yard at Falta, West Bengal; and CSL is establishing a ₹1,570-crore ship repair complex at Vadinar in Gujarat capable of servicing around 34 ships annually.
Source: livemint.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









