Search
Close this search box

ZPMC Signs $164 Million Deal for 1,600-tonne DP-2 Deepwater Crane Vessel

ZPMC won a RMB 1.1488 billion contract to build a 1,600-tonne DP-2 deepwater crane vessel for Guangzhou Salvage Bureau, featuring 90 m piling capability and delivery before 30 June 2027.
Erhang Zhuoyue, a crane vessel built by ZPMC.

SHARE ARTICLE

ZPMC has secured a major shipbuilding contract with Guangzhou Salvage Bureau for a new deepwater crane vessel designed for heavy pile-driving and rapid-response salvage operations, with delivery targeted before 30 June 2027.

The winning bid notice puts the contract value at about RMB 1.1488 billion (around $164 million). The vessel will be equipped with a 1,600-tonne slewing-around-pile crane and a 400-tonne full-rotation crane, supported by DP-2 dynamic positioning to improve station-keeping during complex lifts and installation work.

A central design feature is piling capability at substantial depth. ZPMC says the unit will operate with 142 m pile legs and deliver pile-driving capacity at 90 m water depth—paired with a maximum 1,600-tonne piling workload—positioning it as a top-tier fully rotating pile-driving crane vessel in China.

Although offshore wind support is included in the mission set, the primary tasking is emergency response and salvage in waters under China’s jurisdiction. The vessel is intended to support rapid mobilisation for marine casualties and to conduct salvage work in waters shallower than 90 m.

Operationally, the platform is designed to handle a broad range of heavy marine tasks: lifting equipment at salvage sites, full recovery of smaller wrecks, assistance with larger wrecks, cargo removal, including hazardous materials, oil offloading from tanks, and life-support capability for personnel working on the scene. The crane and deck arrangements also allow transportation and installation of offshore wind components—foundations, support towers, nacelles, and blades—plus nearshore lifting and platform maintenance support.

The contract was signed following a ceremony and project discussions held on 26 December (year not stated), according to ZPMC.

In parallel, ZPMC is also expanding its offshore engineering vessel orderbook. The company recently received an order from Far East Hold for a multi-purpose cable-laying vessel intended for offshore wind cable installation, subsea cable maintenance, and wind farm operations and maintenance activity. The cable-layer is described as having unlimited navigation, a concentric dual-output cable-laying system, a rotatable cable turntable, and DP2 capability.

Editorial Note:
This article was prepared with the assistance of AI tools to enhance clarity and efficiency.
All information has been reviewed and verified by the HMT News editor.
PGE has become the sole owner of the 350 MW Baltic II offshore wind project in the Polish Baltic Sea after RWE sold its stake and transferred related environmental rights.
China’s Dajin Heavy Industry is planning an IPO on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange as it looks to access international funding markets and support expansion in fabrication, shipping and renewable energy projects.
Germany’s Bernhard Schulte Offshore has taken delivery of Windea Carnot, the third CSOV in a series built by Ulstein Verft, adding another offshore wind support vessel with hybrid propulsion and capacity for 132 people.

Subscribe to HMT WEEKLY

Receive HMT WEEKLY in your mailbox.

Heavy Marine Transport News, Delivered Daily — Stay informed on shipping, offshore, and global logistics.

SECTION

INFORMATION

CONTACT

For general inquiries and to contact us,
please email: info@hmt-news.com