Europe Should Resume Shipbuilding

February 26, 2015

 In the EU journal Parliament, Portuguese Member of European Parliament João Ferreira has proposed a five-point plan to stimulate growth in the EU shipbuilding industry. 

 
He said that after a decline in industrial activity since the 1970s, the region’s shipbuilding industry had become increasingly successful and dynamic in recent years. But he argued that the trend was “neither general nor uniform in all EU countries built upon a maritime tradition’” and that the importance of shipbuilding was often undervalued by the EU.
Ferreira pointed out that shipbuilding activity had declined dramatically “by 83%” since the 1970s in Portugal. 
Industrial activity must resume and must be granted additional stimulus. It presents added value, and the bulk of the shipbuilding workforce, as well as merchant, cruise liner and naval fleets must be protected and built in European shipyards. This must be supported by clear and unequivocal legislative positions expressed by the parliament and commission, and which will have to focus on a number of points, he said.
The five-point action plan includes financial support for the relaunch and modernization of the industry; investment in research, development and innovation in ship construction and design; reinforcing existing specialisms in European member states; properly valuing and investing in the shipbuilding workforce; and, perhaps most contentiously, addressing profound imbalances between shipbuilding industries of member states.
“Obviously such imbalances are not exclusively to do with local authorities - national governments’ political orientation is frequently the determining factor,” said Ferreira. “Such is the case in Portugal, where the destruction of large, medium and small shipyards has reached a horrifying level, and where state-owned merchant shipping has been reduced to almost nothing.”

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