Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Philippines

Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Philippines, known as HHIC Phil, was established in February 2006 by Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction of South Korea. In the same month, the first ship building contract was signed for 4 container ships. In May 2006, the construction of a shipyard began on Redondo Peninsula - on the northern edge of Subic Bay.

Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Philippines
IndustryShipbuilding
FoundedFebruary 2006 (2006-02)
Headquarters
Areas served
Worldwide
ServicesShipbuilding
Number of employees
23,000 (2019[1])
ParentHanjin Heavy Industries and Construction
Korean name
Hangul
한진필리핀
Hanja
韓進
Revised RomanizationHanjin Philippines
McCune–ReischauerHanjin Philippines
Websitewww.hhic-phil.com/ 

The first vessel "Argolikos" was delivered in July 2008 for the Greek ship owner Dioryx.[2] As of April 2011, the shipyard had delivered 20 ships. In 2013, the shipyard made its first oil tanker and in 2016, it delivered its first gas carrier. Additionally, the shipyard has also built parts of CALM buoys used for the Malampaya offshore project. The shipyard also has two large drydocks.[3]

In January 2019, the company filed for the biggest bankruptcy in the Philippines with unpaid loan obligations amounting to $412 million.

Background

As a part of its expansion process overseas, in 2004, Hanjin Heavy Industries Corporation started construction of a shipyard in Redondo peninsula, north of Subic bay, Zambales, Philippines. As per the HHIC website, this has resulted in the fourth largest shipyard in the world. As of 2011 September, the shipyard employed 21,000 Filipinos. Its workforce was expected to increase to nearly 28,000 in 2016, however a slump in ship building projects has limited the workforce to 20,000 people as of 2017.

As of September 2017, HHIC Phil is the largest shipyard in the Philippines and one of the largest private employers in the country.

According to the New York Times article "Philippines Role May Grow as U.S. Adjusts Asia Strategy" of April 30, 2012: "On April 18, a subsidiary of Huntington Ingalls Industries, a United States defense contractor, announced a deal to work with Hanjin Heavy Industries, which maintains a shipbuilding and repair facility at the former base at Subic Bay. That opens the door to large-scale servicing of United States military ships there for the first time in almost 20 years."

In a news release announcing the deal, Huntington Ingalls said the companies “will work together in providing maintenance, repair and logistics services to the U.S. Navy and other customers in the Western Pacific region.”

Shipyard

A 20.766 TEU container ship (CMA CGM Louis Bleriot) and oil tanker (Levantine Sea) being constructed at Dry Dock no. 6

The shipyard is located at the tip of the Redondo peninsula, in sitio Agusuhin, in the province of Zambales, Luzon, Philippines.[4] A large number of Koreans and Romanians who form the higher level management of the shipyard live inside the shipyard, in baracks accommodations (often jocularly called chicken coops). The land here is owned by SBMA - Subic bay metropolitan authority and leased out to HHIC Phil on a 40 year lease.

Jeepneys and buses hired to HHIC transport workers daily and run between HHIC shipyard and the two close by towns - Castillejos and Subic, with many others staying in the farther towns of Olongapo and Barrio Baretto. Most workers come to work at HHIC from other parts of the Philippines and stay in boarding houses in these towns. A large ferry takes workers to and from Olongapo daily. The company also charters 25 buses to transport its workers to and from Olongapo daily. Additionally, two smaller fast ferries owned by HHIC transport a small number of owners representatives from the Hanjin jetty (near All hands beach - SBMA) to the shipyard. Security to access the shipyard remains tight due to high pilferage by workers during the early years of the shipyard. The area is also strategically important to the Philippines armed forces, hence is protected by both - The HHIC Police as well as Philippines armed forces commandos.

Bankruptcy

On 22 November 2018, HHIC Phil delivered two recently completed 114,000 DWT crude oil tankers.[5] However, with 20 vessels currently in different stages of construction, the shipyard found it difficult to service its high debts or to get further extensions from its lenders. On January 8, 2019, the yard filed for corporate rehabilitation due to default or failure to comply it loan obligation of $412 million to five Philippine banks namely Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., Land Bank, Metrobank, Bank of the Philippine Islands, and Banco de Oro. This became the biggest bankruptcy in the Philippines surpassing $386 million default by Lehman Brothers in the Philippines in 2008. The five bank creditors are working to take over HHIC Phil's shipyard.[1] On 19 January 2019, it wsa reported that two Chinese firms had lodged expressions of interest to purchase the shipyard along with its debt.[6] Subsequently, Trade Winds reported that HHIC Phil and the Philippine government had agreed upon a debt swap deal.[7]

Labor policy

Nationalities employed

The managerial staff in the shipyard consists of around 100 Koreans. Mid-manager level staff includes Koreans, Romanians and Filipinos. The foremen for workers include Koreans, Filipinos and Romanians, most of them employed by subsidiary companies of HHIC Phil operated by Filipinos. Most of the approximately 200 Romanian workers are employed in dock 5 and a few in Dock No.6 through the Romanian recruitment company Gateway Trading SRL. The large bulk of workers consists of nearly 19,000 Filipinos as of 2017. The shipyard provides free lunch, dinner and breakfast to all its workers in five large canteens.

Alleged labor violations

While HHIC's presence in Subic has brought thousands of jobs to the area, a steady stream of accidental workplace deaths and alleged labor violations has called into question the company's compliance with Philippine labor and occupational safety laws. During a two-month span in 2008, five workers were killed in accidents that may have resulted from unsafe working conditions.[8] This prompted investigations by the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority and Philippine Congress, which found violations of safety and labor laws. At the conclusion of the Congressional investigation, legislators required Hanjin to build a medical center and comply with industrial safety laws within six months. Workers have since continued to express complaints of abuse on the part of management; one such incident was caught on camera and distributed to the Filipino news station ABS-CBN.[9] Many workers have also begun to organize to attain union recognition. According to organizers, who have started a blog to document abuses, 60 employees have been terminated for union-related activity and over 30 have been killed in workplace accidents since the shipyard opened in 2006.[10] Filipino church groups like the Caritas Filipinas Foundation have also rallied around the workers.[11] HHIC-Phil general manager Pyeong Jong Yu has expressed commitment to preventing future incidents.[12]

Since 2011, standards of safety at the shipyard have improved, especially after ship owners introduced their own health and safety teams to augment the shipyard efforts.

List of ships built

The shipyard builds bulk carriers, container ships and oil tankers. Additionally, it has undertaken offshore construction work such as CALM buoys for offshore projects such as the Malampaya offshore project.[13]

  • Container ships - Capacity in TEUs - 4,300, 3,600 and 12,800
  • Bulk carriers - Capacity 135,000 tonnes, 175,000 tonnes, 205,000 tonnes
  • VLCC - capacity 320,000 tonnes

Ships built by HHIC Phil

Note: This ship may be incomplete.

  1. M/V Argolikos - container (First container ship built in Philippines, First ship built by HHIC Phil)[14]
  2. M/T Eser K - 114,000-deadweight ton crude oil tanker[15]
  3. M/T Leyla K - tanker - Largest tanker built in Philippines - as of October 2011[16]
  4. M/V Mineral Manila - bulk carrier[17]
  5. M/V Mineral Subic - bulk carrier[18]
  6. M/V Lake Dolphin (capacity 180,000 deadweight tonnes and net tonnage 59,082 tons).[19]
  7. M/V Rahi - bulk carrier[20][21]
  8. M/V Vanshi - bulk carrier[22]
  9. M/V Opal - container[23]
  10. M/V Topaz - Container[24]
  11. M/V Turquoise - container - Also called CMA CGM Turquoise[25]
  12. M/V Star Borealis[26]
  13. M/V Star Polaris
  14. M/V Houheng 2 (2011)[27]
  15. M/V Rio Manaus (2011 - MPC GmBH Germany)[28]
  16. M/V Rio Montevideo (2011 - MPC GmBH Germany) - Bulk carrier
  17. M/V Houheng 3 (2011) - Bulk carrier
  18. M/V Brightway (2012) - Tanker
  19. M/V FMG Matilda (2012) - Bulk carrier, Bocimar group
  20. M/V Aanya (2012) - Bulk carrier
  21. M/V RTM Cook (2012) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  22. M/V RTM Cartier (2012) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  23. M/V Broadway (2012) - Tanker, Tanker Pacific
  24. M/V Crossway (2012) - Tanker, Tanker Pacific
  25. M/V RTM Dampier (2012) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  26. RTM Zheng He (2012) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  27. RTM Cabot (2013) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  28. RTM Drake(2013) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  29. RTM Columbus (2013) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  30. RTM Tasman (2013) - Bulk carrier, Rio Tinto Marine[29]
  31. Maersk Euphrates (2014) - Container, Maersk lines[30]
  32. CMA CGM Antoine de Saint Exupery (2018) - Contianer, CMA CGM (France)[31]
  33. Koksijde (2018) - LPG Carrier, Exmar.
  34. Kapellen (2018) - LPG Carrier, Exmar.[32]
  35. CMA CGM Louis Bleriot (2018) - Container, CMA CGM (France)[33]
  36. Levantine Sea (2018) - Crude oil tanker, Tomtef shipping inc. (Singapore)
  37. Iberian Sea (2018) - Crude oil tanker, Drom Maritime Inc. (Singapore)
  38. CMA CGM Jean Mermoz (2018) - 20,600 TEU Container, CMA CGM (France)[34]

References

  1. Lucas, Daxim; Camus, Miguel (11 January 2019). "Local banks grapple with biggest default in PH corporate history". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
  2. "Hanjin Subic launches its first ship".
  3. "Hanjin delivers 2 new bulk carriers to Greek firm". Malaya Business Insight. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 8 October 2011.
  4. "Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction-Philippines, Inc. - Wikimapia".
  5. "Hanjin Shipyard Delivers 2 units of 114K Crude Oil Tanker". HHIC Phil news room. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  6. "Chinese Investors Interested in Cash-Strapped Hanjin Subic". World maritime news. 14 January 2019. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  7. "Hanjin strikes debt-swap deal for Philippines yard". Trade Winds. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  8. News, ABS-CBN. "Two workers killed in another Hanjin 'freak' accident".
  9. News, ABS-CBN. "Hanjin labor 'abuse' caught on cam".
  10. "Hanjinworkers's Blog".
  11. http://nassa.org.ph/?p=94
  12. http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/regions/03/11/08/two-workers-killed-another-hanjin-freak-accident..
  13. Olchondra, Riza (21 February 2014). "$756M Malampaya rig going up in Subic". Inquirer. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  14. "Marinebix TV - Dioryx Maritime receives MV Argolikos, first ever container ship to be made in Philippines".
  15. "BatangGapo News SubicBayNews - Olongapo News, SubicJobs, Olongapo City Philippines".
  16. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-04-25. Retrieved 2011-10-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. http://www.timawa.net/forum/index.php?topic=28394.0
  18. "SubicNewsLink".
  19. http://www.hhic-phil.com/pr/newsroom_read.aspx?bbsID=226
  20. "YouTube".
  21. "MV Rahi and Vanshi - Adani group official website". Archived from the original on 2011-10-07. Retrieved 2011-10-11.
  22. "YouTube".
  23. "BatangGapo News SubicBayNews - Olongapo News, SubicJobs, Olongapo City Philippines".
  24. "Punto! Central Luzon".
  25. "Manila Times - MV Turquoise". Archived from the original on 2012-04-25. Retrieved 2011-10-11.
  26. "MV Star Borealis". Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
  27. "HMV Houheng 2". Archived from the original on 2012-04-03. Retrieved 2011-10-11.
  28. "MPC Steamship Germany". Archived from the original on 2012-04-25. Retrieved 2011-10-12.
  29. "Fleet list". riotinto.com. Rio Tinto Marine. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  30. "Ship Delivery of M/V Maersk Euphrates". veralaw.com. Vera law. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  31. "Press release - Shipping Giant CMA CGM Highly Commends HHIC-Phil Inc". HHIC Phil. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  32. "Press release - Hanjin Subic shipyard cruises in stride". HHIC Phil. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  33. "Press release - Hanjin Subic shipyard launches 3 vessels simultaneously". HHIC Phil. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  34. "Press release - Hanjin Shipyard Delivers 2nd Subic-made 20,600 TEU Containership Vessel". HHIC Phil. 18 May 2018. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
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