India’s Blue Economy ambitions propel fresh incentives for green ships
NEW DELHI : India will provide additional incentives to encourage domestic shipyards to develop fuel-efficient and technologically advanced vessels as part of its ambitious plans to transform the country’s shipping industry.
The ports, shipping, and waterways ministry is finalising a cabinet note to provide a 25% subsidy for specialized vessels, and up to 30% for green vessels and other highly specialised ships, according to two persons aware of the matter.
These subsidies will be provided under the government’s ₹18,000 crore shipbuilding financial assistance policy (SBFAP) 2.0, they said.
This policy will replace SBFAP 1.0, which was launched in 2016 for a 10-year period to incentivize shipbuilding. Under SBFAP 1.0, financial assistance provided to Indian shipyards for shipbuilding contracts was slashed from 20% in 2016 to 11%.
The shipping ministry has defined green vessels as those run on biofuels, methanol, ethanol or electricity. Highly specialised ships such as hydrogen-powered vessels use advanced propulsion technologies that reduce emissions while delivering more power.
The additional shipbuilding incentives are part of the government’s ambitions to develop India’s blue economy, or the sustainable use of ocean resources, and position the country as a ship-manufacturing hub. India currently has less than 1% of the global shipbuilding market, which is dominated by China, South Korea, and Japan.
Subsidies under the new policy will be based on the contracted price of a vessel, or the fair value determined by the government, for ships manufactured at an Indian shipyard, said one of the persons mentioned above.
This person added that the level of financial assistance will be maintained throughout the scheme’s duration, likely until 31 March 2034.
The second person said the shipping ministry has estimated an initial budgetary requirement of ₹18,000 crore for SBFAP 2.0.
“Domestic shipbuilding will help achieve the government’s target of controlling at least 5% of global tonnage,” said Pushpank Kaushik, Chief Executive of Jassper Shipping, a Hyderabad-based global shipping and logistics firm.
“Presently, we have less than 1% of global tonnage and it is not enough to achieve the targeted economy growth and development of the nation. Domestic shipbuilding will not only support Indian ship owners but will also become an alternate shipbuilding destination away from Vietnam, Korea, Japan and China,” he said.