QatarEnergy and Nakilat Sign Long-Term Agreement for Nine QC-Max LNG Vessels

May 9, 2024

QatarEnergy has signed a long-term agreement with Qatar Gas Transport Company Limited (Nakilat), under which Nakilat will own and operate nine QC-Max class LNG vessels, the largest LNG vessels ever built.

The nine QC-Max vessels, with a capacity of 271,000 cubic meters each, constitute half of the 18 advanced QC-Max class LNG vessels that will be constructed at China’s Hudong-Zhonghua Shipyard.

(Credit: QatarEnergy)
(Credit: QatarEnergy)

To date, QatarEnergy’s fleet expansion program encompassed the execution of shipbuilding contracts and time charter agreements for 104 conventional LNG vessels and 18 QC-Max class LNG vessels, for a total of 122 ultra-modern vessels, with the first new ship expected to be delivered by the end of the third quarter of this year.



“We are very proud to have Qatar’s flagship LNG shipping and maritime champion join a list of world-class shipowners operating our state-of-the-art QC-Max LNG vessels - the largest ever built. There is no doubt that this is another testament to Nakilat’s significant capabilities,” said Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi, the Minister of State for Energy Affairs, the President and CEO of QatarEnergy.

The long-term agreement follows February’s selection of Nakilat as the owner and operator of 25 conventional-size LNG vessels.

It also follows the signing of similar agreements in Beijing with three Chinese ship owners for the operation of nine new QC-Max class LNG vessels as part of QatarEnergy’s historic LNG fleet expansion program, which will cater for QatarEnergy’s future requirements, as it moves forward with the expansion of its LNG production capacity from the North Field to 142 million tons per annum by 2030.


Related News

Jan De Nul Orders Another XL Cable Layer No Shortage of Good Ideas to Address the Mariner Shortage Brunvoll to Equip REM Offshore's Next-Gen Subsea Construction Vessel Consortium Wins Tender for France's First Floating Offshore Wind Farm Gulf Intercoastal Waterway Closed After Barge Strikes Bridge in Galveston