Korean shipbuilders are being credited with gaining ground on Chinese rivals in the order race by stressing schedule certainty and shorter build cycles as ocean freight rates decline.
The push for quicker handover is becoming more pronounced in a softer freight market. Industry sources say that when rates are low, shipowners want ships delivered sooner so they can deploy more vessels and improve earnings. With cargo volumes continuing to grow, owners are also demanding on-time delivery and faster handover.
Freight indicators have been sliding. The Shanghai Containerized Freight Index stood at 1,457.86 as of the 23rd of the previous month, down 28.7% from the same point a year earlier (2,045.45). The report adds that if Suez Canal transit resumes this year, rates are expected to fall further.
Early delivery is also feeding into financial results. Hanwha Ocean delivered its second wind turbine installation vessel to Cadeler one month earlier than the original contract at the end of the latest reported year and received an additional $4.5 million (about KRW 6.4 billion). Contracts between shipyards and shipowners generally specify liquidated damages for delays, typically equal to 1/1000 of the ship price per day, while early handover can bring incentives.
Korean yards link the speed advantage to long experience operating docks and managing tight schedules. HD Hyundai Heavy Industries builds ships across nine docks and calculates block progress rates by dock to compile a dock status chart aimed at reducing wasted time and expense. It also uses a tandem method, carrying out additional block work by using 30–40 m of space created between ship blocks in a filled dock. Kwon Hyo-jae at the Seoul National University Institute of Marine Systems Engineering said inserting a new ship schedule between slots is a simultaneous task that can require rushing drawings and even material orders, and he added that only Korean yards with advanced technology and seasoned work experience can execute it.
The latest reported delivery figures are being cited as evidence. On the 3rd, the shipbuilding industry said HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering handed over 136 ships in total and delivered 96 of them early, or 70.6%. The same report said its early delivery rate fell from 40.4% in 2023 to 35.4% in 2024, then climbed sharply in the most recent year cited. An HD Hyundai official said every production stage was verified at worksites and the process model was advanced, adding that productivity and efficiency gains have recently shortened shipbuilding times. Industry sources also described cases in which a shipowner first ordered the same design in China and later placed the same order with a Korean yard, but the Korean builder completed and delivered about a year earlier.