
Industry sources report that the parent of the company has tapped a Chinese yard to construct new boxship tonnage to support its container operations.
The move signals confidence in long-term demand trends across maritime logistics, especially for smaller and mid-sized container ship capacity that feeds regional trades and last-mile connections.
SITC has previously engaged Huanghai Shipbuilding on a series of 1,800-TEU containership orders, exercising multiple options to grow the series.
These earlier orders are part of a broader plan to modernise and deepen the company’s ownership of its fleet rather than rely solely on charter markets.
The vessels are expected to be delivered toward the end of the decade and will strengthen the carrier’s ability to meet customer requirements across Asia, where resilience and reliability have become focal points for shippers.
The decision to order new ships from a Chinese builder is consistent with broader industry patterns, with major carriers and leasing firms placing significant orders at Chinese yards in recent years.
China has emerged as a dominant centre for commercial shipbuilding, with a large share of global container ship orders being placed there.
While geopolitical dynamics have introduced strategic considerations in some markets, carriers continue to value the production capacity, price competitiveness and delivery pipelines offered by Chinese facilities.
The Hong Kong shipping company’s latest order reflects a continued commitment to fleet renewal and operational capacity building, aligning with long-term commercial projections for containerised cargo growth.
With global trade networks evolving, regional operators like SITC are positioning themselves to capture opportunities in intra-regional services as well as connections with major east–west trades.
By reinforcing its asset base with additional Chinese-built boxships, the company aims to combine scale and flexibility to serve diverse customer needs.
The newbuild programme also underscores the interconnectedness of Hong Kong’s maritime sector with broader Chinese shipbuilding and shipping ecosystems, even as factors such as trade policy and market cycles shape ordering strategies.




































