AAL Dammam unveiled in China and set to serve strong global industrial project demand

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Global project heavy lift specialist AAL Shipping is preparing to take delivery of its sixth 32,000-deadweight , 700 metric tonne  heavy lift Super B-Class vessel – the AAL Dammam. Unveiled at a naming ceremony at the CSSC Huangpu Wenchong Shipyard in Guangzhou, China, she is part of an eight-vessel newbuild fleet totalling 256,000 DWT. With project customers already lining up to make full use of this innovative heavy lifter, she will immediately enter service with her maiden voyage, transporting offshore renewable energy cargo from China to the UK.

The methanol-ready and dual-fuel AAL Dammam was engineered to transport a vast array of multipurpose cargoes including heavy lift project components, breakbulk, and dry bulk all on a single voyage. The 41,500 cubic meter newbuild has a length of 179.9 meters and a breadth of 30 meters. She can accommodate over 100,000 freight tons of breakbulk and heavy lift cargo and is equipped with three 350 MT heavy lift cranes, combinable up to a 700 MT maximum. Two large, box-shaped cargo holds are optimized for dry bulk, featuring adjustable pontoon triple decks and no centre-line bulkhead.

Reflecting on the significant investment this newbuild fleet represents, Kyriacos Panayides, Chief Executive Officer, AAL, commented:

“Whilst the current geopolitical landscape makes short-term planning extremely difficult, the long-term forecast for the global industrial sector – which we specifically designed and built these powerhouses to serve – is nevertheless strong.

“Global industry is experiencing record levels of capital input, with clean-energy investment alone expected to hit US$2.2 trillion in 2025, according to the International Energy Agency. And whilst renewables continue to lead new project activity, we are not dependent on a simple ‘fossil-to-clean’ shift for cargo volumes, but rather a layered build-out across all industrial energy and resource sectors.

“Oil and gas project development is forecasted to grow to US$9.9 trillion by 2029, with LNG a bright spot featuring multiple export projects in the US, Qatar, and Canada due online by 2026–2028. The mining sector too remains strong, with over 5,400 mining projects valued at US$406 billion scheduled to start construction by the end of 2025.”

In 2026, AAL will take delivery of its final two Super B-Class vessels — the AAL Newcastle and AAL Mumbai — which will feature an increased maximum heavy lift capability of 800 MT.

Source: cyprusshippingnews.com