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The Titanic II will mark the entrance of China to the cruise-ship industry

Tuesday, May 1st 2012 - 08:53 UTC
Full article 19 comments
Australian mining magnate and close associate of China will finance the construction of Titanic II Australian mining magnate and close associate of China will finance the construction of Titanic II

Australian mining billionaire Clive Palmer plans to build a 21st-century replica of the Titanic and sail it from England to New York accompanied by the Chinese navy by the end of 2016.

He has signed a first-stage agreement with Nanjing-based CSC Jinling Shipyard to build the ship as part of a planned fleet of luxury liners, the Gold Coast, Queensland-based businessman said in an e-mailed statement.

Palmer, whose investments include golf courses, hotels, coal and iron-ore mining projects, a nickel smelter, a soccer team and a horse stud, said the 500 million dollars ship will have the same dimensions as the original Titanic.

The Titanic, commissioned by White Star Line, was the largest liner in the world when built at just less than 270 meters and 53 meters high. It sank on April 15, 1912, after hitting an iceberg east of Newfoundland, costing the lives of more than 1,500 passengers and crew, according to the statement. The Titanic II will, like its predecessor, have 840 rooms on nine decks, Palmer said.

“It will be every bit as luxurious as the original Titanic, but of course it will have state-of-the-art 21st century technology and the latest navigation and safety systems,” Palmer said, along with gymnasiums and swimming pools.

Palmer, 58, a former media adviser to Queensland's late state Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen, is known for ambitious projects in varied fields.

In March he was quoted by the Sydney Morning Herald promising to invest in a blind trust to encourage media diversity in Australia, and saying that Australia's Greens party was funded by the CIA.

He unveiled the Titanic II plan just over an hour before a separate announcement that he would stand against Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan in his seat of Lilley at a federal election due next year.

The move into the cruise-ship industry, one of the few areas of heavy manufacturing still dominated by European companies, would be a challenge for a Chinese company, said Hur Sung Duck, an analyst at HI Investment & Securities Co. in Seoul.

“That's a huge jump for a country that builds mostly bulk ships” used for carrying coal, iron ore and grains, Hur said. “I seriously find it difficult to believe it can be built by that time.”

Italy's Fincantieri Cantieri Navali Italiani SpA, Norway's STX Europe AS and Germany's Meyer Werft GmbH, are the largest players in the cruise ship-building market, according to a 2010 presentation by Samsung Heavy Industries Co.

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. last November completed two ships for Carnival Corp., while STX Europe is owned by Changwon, Korea-based STX Corp.

“The Chinese ship-building industry with our assistance wants to be a major player in this market,” Palmer said in the statement.

The ship would sail under his company, to be named Blue Star Line in reference to the Titanic's owner. China's navy would be invited “to escort Titanic II on its maiden voyage to New York,” Palmer said.

Blue Star Line was registered on April 18 as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Palmer's Mineralogy Pty., according to its only document filed with Australia's securities regulator. Palmer and Derek Payne, manager of his Cold Mountain horse stud, are the only officers listed in the three-page filing.

The mining magnate has a fortune of 5.3 billion dollars and is Australia's fifth-richest person, according to BRW magazine rankings. He is developing coal and iron-ore mines in Australia, including the 8 billion dollars China First coal project in Queensland State.
 

Top Comments

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  • Idlehands

    It will only be viable if the nostalgia element attracts business. Titanic was an ocean liner rather than a cruise ship and is only 1/5th the size of the monstrosities they build nowadays. Royal Carribean operate vessels over 225,000 tonnes. Titanic was barely 50,000

    May 01st, 2012 - 09:08 am 0
  • DanyBerger

    I only hope will not end like the first one.

    May 01st, 2012 - 09:41 am 0
  • Rufus

    The choice of name isn't perhaps in the best of taste, but at least it'll have a fair chunk of PLAN escorting it on it's maiden voyage.
    That way if something happens (and lets face it, if the fate of the RMS Titanic was partly due to the captain showboating, and Palmer doesn't exactly strike me as the shy retiring type based on this) they can fish out the survivors sharpish.

    May 01st, 2012 - 10:02 am 0
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