Kattupalli Port Adani.jpg | |
Other name(s) | Kattupalli Shipyard |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Kattupalli, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India |
Status | opened |
Coordinates | 13°18′44″N 80°20′44″E / 13.312114°N 80.345598°E |
Built by | TIDCO and Larsen & Toubro |
Opening | January 2012[1] |
Technical details | |
Cost | ₹4,675 crore |
No of Super-Post Panamax crane | 6 |
Maximum draft | 14 m |
Quay length | 3.35 km |
Terminal area | 20 ha |
Dry berths | 6 |
Wet Berths | 4 |
The Kattupalli Shipyard, officially Adani Katupalli Port Private Limited, is a large shipyard project at Kattupalli village near Ennore in Chennai, being built by L&T Shipbuilding Ltd. It is being set up jointly by TIDCO and Larsen & Toubro (L&T) in two phases. L&T shipbuilding Kattupalli is a minor port. Adani ports and special economic zone (APSEZ) acquired Kattupalli Port from L&T in June 2018 and renamed it as Adani Katupalli Port Private Limited (AKPPL).
In terms of cargo generation, the terminal is located close to the majority of Container Freight stations in Chennai. The Kattupalli development also includes a shipyard being developed by L&T, a private sector–backed development.
It is planning to compete with Japanese and Korean shipyards in building "specialised ships," such as large-size warships, car carriers, submarines, naval offshore patrol vessels, fast patrol vessels and corvettes. After Colombo and Singapore, Kattupalli will be the third major international destination for ship repairs in the region.[2]
The shipyard-cum-minor port complex was officially inaugurated on 30 January 2013.[3]
The first development phase, which aims to be operational by January 2012,[needs update] will have a 12 lakh (1.2 million) TEU capacity through two 350-metre-long L-shaped berths and a total terminal area of around 20 hectares. The berths would be operated by Philippines-based International Container Terminal Services Inc for 28 years.[4] The terminal has an option to rise to 18 lakh (1.8 million) TEU capacity during the second phase of development.[5]
Mobile equipment will include two reach stackers and one empty handler.
The yard will offer 5,000 ground slots and a CFS is also planned as part of the service package. Access to the terminal on the marine side is via a 3.5 km-long channel and port basin offering a draft of 14 m—the draft capability is such that it provides for projected increases in Southern Asian container trade. It also provides for the future possibility of mainline Asia–Europe vessels making a stop in Southern India, which has been mooted as a distinct possibility by certain analysts. Kattupalli's North and South breakwaters, which together total 3.35 km, ensure a safe harbour and uninterrupted terminal operations.
The yard has 3 rail-mounted quayside cranes (RMQCs) (arrived at the port in December 2011 from China), 15 rubber-tyred gantry cranes (RTGCs), two reach stackers and 420 reefer plug points. On 12 April 2012, the yard received Zhen Hua 20, a heavy lift vessel, with three more RMQCs to be installed at the second berth.[4]
When fully completed, it will be the largest shipyard in Asia.[6] Once operational, the shipyard will become a nucleus for heavy engineering industry (fabrications and components manufacturing).[7] This would make Chennai a hub for engineering components. The project is being implemented in two phases with a total investment of about ₹4,675 crore. ₹3,050 crore will be invested in Phase I (2009–11), and the rest in Phase II (2012–15). MoU has been signed and the project has commenced.[8]
As of October 2019, a 6.08 km rail corridor to ferry cargo to the port is being built at a cost of ₹51.8 crore on a 31.175-hectare (77.04-acre) area.[9]
The Kattupalli yard is mainly built for making warships and to augment the existing capacity at Hazira in Gujarat for submarines. A draft of up to 14m and a waterfront exceeding 2.2 km makes the facility well suited to building large defence ships.[10]
The Integrated shipyard complex will have the following facilities:
At the yard, encompassing 1,250 acres,[11] L&T has also commissioned facilities to build offshore platforms, drilling rigs and FPSOs (floating production, storage and offloading unit), besides a minor port which can handle container ships. An 18,000-tonne shiplift is being installed at the yard.
In the first phase, around ₹4,000 crore is being invested in the facility that will start rolling out ships by January 2012.[1][2]
7 August 2009
26 April 2010
14 Sep 2010
26 Sep 2010
06 Apr 2011
08 Jun 2011
25 Jul 2011
Jun 2015
Construction of New Build Projects: In 2015 L&T has bagged order for construction of 7 Offshore patrol vessels for the Indian Coast Guard and Floating Dock for the Indian Navy which will be designed in house at L&T Ship Design Centre. At commercial new build front L&T Shipbuilding is currently executing eight offshore vessels at Kattupalli Yard for Overseas Client. Presently L&T is executing a project for construction of 54 Interceptor Boats for the Indian Coast Guard. Designed in-house with waterjet propulsion and aluminium hull, these boats have a speed of over 45 knots and excellent manoeuvrability.[18][19]
Design Centre: L&T Shipbuilding has a design centre with capability of in-house designing of Naval ships and submarines and has already developed basic designs of Interceptor Boats, Offshore Patrol Vessels, Corvettes etc. which can be adapted to customer requirements. 3D Modelling integrated with Product Lifecycle Management and other Design and Analysis software suites enable accuracy, revision control and output aligned with yard infrastructure.[18][20]
Ship Repairs, Refits & Conversions: L&T Shipbuilding is geared to handle ship repairs, refits and conversions catering to commercial and Defence ships/submarines and offshore platforms. A shiplift of 200m x 46m with lifting capacity of 21,050 tonnes (future extension planned for larger vessels) along with transfer system and dry berths enables quick turnaround of ships. There are 4 wet berths of 260 / 200 metres length. Many refit projects have been successfully completed.[21][22]
In December 2015, L&T was chosen by the Russian shipbuilder Sevmash to be its Indian partner in the second refit project of the Sindhughosh-class submarines. While the first of the four Kilo class subs will go to the Russian Zvezdochka shipyard for inspection and refit, the remaining three are to be modernized at the Kattupalli shipyard. The first of the submarines to be modernized at private yard, a first for India, will go in by 2017.[24][25][26] In an official letter to the Indian Government, the Russian shipyard has put forward its willingness to work alongside L&T. L&T will play a major role in a planned ₹5,000 crore (equivalent to ₹75 billion or US$900 million in 2023) Kilo-class submarine modernisation plan of the Indian Navy. The shipyard was nominated after it was the only found to be the technically capable facility after a survey of the equipment profile and finances of Cochin Shipyard and Pipavav Shipyard.[27][28]
On 7 August 2022, the United States Navy sent its first ship, USNS Charles Drew (T-AKE-10), to Kattupalli Shipyard of Larsen & Toubro for an 11-day repair and allied services work.[29][30] The repair work was completed on 17 August 2022. This was a result of the U.S.-India 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue in April 2022 where US was represented by Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken.[31]
The second ship, USNS Matthew Perry (T-AKE-9), underwent repair and upgrades from 11 to 27 March 2023. After the refit, the ship returned to the Indo-Pacific theatre for operations.[32][33][34]
On 9 July 2023, the third ship, USNS Salvor (T-ARS 52), reached Kattupalli Shipyard for "Voyage Repairs".[35][36][37] The time period for the repair is two weeks after which it will again return in November for a 90 day comprehensive repair.[38][39]
On 10 July 2023, the US Navy signed a Master Ship Repair Agreement (MSRA) with Larsen & Toubro for US Navy's Military Sealift Command Fleet Support Ships for a period of 5 years. The shipyard has qualified for such repair works by the Indian Navy and Coast Guard as well. This was recorded as a direct outcome of the 2022 U.S.-India 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue. The MSRA is a ‘legally non-binding arrangement’ between the US Navy and private shipbuilding contractors to pre-approve shipyards to repair US naval vessels, according to a report.[40][41][42] The ships operated by MSC are non-commissioned US Navy “support vessels” with civilian crews bearing the prefix “USNS”. Under the agreement, the US Naval ships of Seventh Fleet or the Indo-Pacific Command that are in voyage are to be repaired in India.[39][43]
In March 2024, maintenance of RFA Argus and RFA Lyme Bay was undertaken at the Kattupalli Shipyard in India. This was the first time that a Royal Navy ship has arrived in an Indian shipyard for maintenance. The ships, escorted by HMS Diamond, had transited through the Red Sea to reach India.[44][45] Later, in April 2024, LRG(S) participated in Maritime Partnership Exercise with Indian Navy's Eastern Fleet in the Indian Ocean, including stealth frigate INS Sahyadri.[46][47]
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