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Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company

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(Redirected from Dalian Shipyard) Part of China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation

38°56′27″N 121°36′31″E / 38.940919°N 121.60861°E / 38.940919; 121.60861

Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company
大连船舶重工集团有限公司
Company typeState-owned enterprise
IndustryShipbuilding
Founded1898
HeadquartersDalian, Liaoning, China
Key peopleLiu Zheng (Chairman)
RevenueIncrease CN¥20 billion
Total assetsIncrease CN¥100 billion
ParentChina Shipbuilding Industry Corporation (merged into China State Shipbuilding Corporation)
Websitewww.dsic.cn
Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company in Dalian, Liaoning, China
China's first aircraft carrier Liaoning under refit in Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company
China's second aircraft carrier Shandong after launching in Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company

Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company (DSIC), located in Dalian, Liaoning province, China. It is part of China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation (CSIC), which has since been merged into China State Shipbuilding Corporation to form China's largest shipbuilding company.

General

Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company (DSIC) was formed in December 2005, as the result of a merger between Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company and Dalian New Shipbuilding Industry Company, and is the largest shipbuilding company in China. It is owned by:

which is one of the two state-owned enterprises that came into being under the directive of the China State Council of 1999, the other being:

While the former corporation is listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, the latter is not (yet) listed. Separately, the People's Liberation Army Navy owns military ship yards, such as in Lushun, Dalian, Liaoning.

DSIC located on two shipyards with a total of 3,400,000 square meters of land and owns 15,000 employees. Its revenue in 2006 exceeded CN¥10,000,000,000 which puts itself as the No. 1 shipbuilding company in China, exceeding Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Industry Company.

History

Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company has a history of more than 100 years.

  • June, 1898: Russia started construction of a ship yard next to Dalian Port, in their new leased territory
  • 1905: Japan replaced Russia to lease Dalian and continued to expand the ship yard
  • 1945: The Soviet Union liberates Manchuria and shared the operations of Dalian Shipyard with China.
  • 1955: Became "China Shipbuilding Company", managed by China
During the 1960s, built China's first submarine equipped with guided missiles
During the 1970s, built China's first destroyer equipped with guided missiles
  • July, 1984: Spun off Dalian Maritime Diesel Company (DMDC) and other subsidiaries
  • August, 1990: Dalian New Shipyard was completed in the west of the old ship yard
During the 1990s, with help from Hitachi Shipbuilding Corporation (now part of Universal Shipbuilding Corporation) and others, introduced the "block construction" method, reducing the ship building time and cost
  • August, 2000: Dalian New Ship Yard was incorporated as Dalian New Shipbuilding Industry Co., Ltd.
  • April, 2002: Dalian New Ship Yard was incorporated as Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Co., Ltd.
  • 2005: Under the directive of the China State Council, these two companies merged to become Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Co., Ltd.
  • 2009: The former Soviet aircraft carrier Varyag was converted to the People's Liberation Army Navy's aircraft carrier Liaoning for training.
  • 2014: Converted the Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning from training aircraft carrier to active combat ready aircraft carrier
  • 2013-2017: Built first indigenous Chinese aircraft carrier Shandong

See also

References

  1. 大连船舶重工集团董事长访问大连交通大学. Dalian Jiaotong University (in Chinese). Retrieved 3 January 2015.
  2. ^ "About Us". Official website of DSIC. Archived from the original on 10 September 2019. Retrieved 3 January 2015.
  3. Yano research Institute: Shipbuilding in China Archived 2017-12-17 at the Wayback Machine (in Japanese)
  4. A History of DSIC (in Chinese)

External links

China Shipbuilding companies of China
China State Shipbuilding Corporation
Shanghai
Guangdong
Liaoning
Hubei
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