Wan Hai Lines, Ltd. (Chinese: 萬海航運股份有限公司; pinyin: Wàn Hǎi Hángyùn Gǔfèn Yǒuxiàn Gōngsī) is a Taiwanese shipping company founded in 1965. Since then, it has become one of the largest companies in the container shipping industry, with a fleet of 142 vessels and a carrying capacity of 430,854 TEUs as of January 2023.[1]

History

In Wan Hai's early days, most of its business was shipping lumber between Taiwan, Japan, and Southeast Asia. In 1976, as international trade in the Asia-Pacific region expanded and international transportation moved to containerization, Wan Hai entered the business of container vessel shipping. Wan Hai eventually expanded its Asia shipping network to services to Canada, U.S., South America, Africa, and Middle East.

In August 2017, a new weekly service to Cambodia from Taiwan was added, also regularly calling China and Thailand for loading and discharging cargo.[2]

In August 2018, the company ordered for 20 new ships, including eight large vessels[3] and 12 small feeder ships, from Japanese and Chinese shipyards.[4] On 21 January 2021, Wan Hai ordered 50,000 new containers from China International Marine Containers due to shortages in the international container market caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[5]

In December 2022, Wan Hai Lines put ten of its older container ships up for sale for scrap in order to reduce the size of its fleet, including Wan Hai 165, with the stipulation that buyers would be required to send the ships to scrapyards that met the Wan Hai Lines' environmental standards.[6][7]

Fleet

Container ship classes of Wan Hai Lines
Ship class Built Capacity (TEU) Ships in class Notes
2020–onwards 1,900 12 8 to be built by Japan Marine United Corporation and 4 to be built by CSSC Huangpu Wenchong Shipbuilding[4]
2020–onwards 2,038 12 To be built by Guangzhou Wenchong Shipyard[3]
2020–onwards 3,036 8 To be built by Japan Marine United Corporation[3]
2022–onwards 3,013 12 To be built by Japan Marine United Corporation[8]
2023–onwards 13,200 5 To be built by Hyundai Heavy Industries[9]
2023–onwards 13,100 5 To be built by Samsung Heavy Industries[10]
2023–onwards 3,055 12 To be built by Nihon Shipyard[11]

See also

References

Official website

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