MV Werften

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Company type
Shipyard
Founder2016
Defunct2022
SuccessorTKMS Wismar
MV Werften
Company type
Shipyard
Founder2016
Defunct2022
SuccessorTKMS Wismar
Headquarters
Germany
ParentGenting Hong Kong

MV Werften was a Hong KongGerman shipbuilding company that operated three facilities in eastern Germany to construct cruise ships for parent company Genting Hong Kong.

In January 2022, MV Werften filed for bankruptcy, and an administrator was appointed by the court to oversee the bankruptcy proceedings.[1] The company's three yards were sold off.

Bankruptcy

The company was originated in Genting Hong Kong's purchase in April 2016 of three shipyards from Nordic Yards, located in Wismar, Stralsund, and Rostock-Warnemünde.[2] The yards were initially combined with Lloyd Werft, previously purchased by Genting, to form the Lloyd Werft Group,[3] but in July 2016 the three eastern ex-Nordic yards were organized into MV Werften, headquartered in Wismar and led by Jarmo Laakso.[4]

In August 2016, MV Werften's first newbuild vessels, two river cruise ships of the Rhine class named Crystal Bach and Crystal Mahler, were laid down at the Wismar shipyard.[5] In November, Genting Hong Kong publicized further plans for its shipbuilding plans at MV Werftenfour river cruise vessels for Crystal Cruises under the Crystal River Cruises brand to be delivered in 2017 and 2018, followed by a 20,000 GT Endeavor class yacht annually for Crystal Yacht Cruises in 20192021, with Dream Cruises receiving a Global class cruise ship in 2020 and a sister ship the following year.[6] At full capacity post-2021, the three shipyards are planned to be able to build two vessels of both the Endeavor and Global classes annually.[6]

Rostock shipyard with Global Dream under construction
Facility in Wismar

The first Rhine class vessel, Crystal Bach, was delivered in August 2017,[7] followed by Crystal Mahler in September.[8]

In January 2018, shipbuilding began at the Stralsund shipyard with a ceremony for the first steelcutting in the construction of Crystal Endeavor, the first Endeavor class yacht.[9] In March, construction of the first Global class ship began, with components to be built at both the Rostock and Wismar yards and the vessel assembled in Wismar.[10]

In December 2019, Genting Hong Kong announced that MV Werften would build a new class of mid-size cruise ships, named the Universal class, which would measure 88,000 gross tons with a capacity for 2,000 passengers. The first ship of the class was scheduled for delivery in late 2022.[11]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, MV Werften suspended operations in March 2020, delaying the expected deliveries of both Universal and Global class vessels.[12] In July 2020, MV Werften received €175 million in financial aid from a consortium of commercial and state sources, which was expected to keep the shipyard solvent until an expected federal aid package of up to €570 million later in the year.[12] In October 2020, MV Werften received a €193 million loan from the German federal government's Economic Stabilisation Fund, which allowed for the resumption of work that month on Crystal Endeavor, with a target of a March 2021 delivery, and Global Dream.[13]

In January 2022, MV Werften filed for bankruptcy, following a breakdown of talks between the German government and Genting Hong Kong to secure further support to refinance its shipyards' operations.[14] An administrator was appointed by the courts, with a stated aim to pay the outstanding salaries of the workers and complete Global Dream.[1]

The shipyard in Rostock was sold to the German Navy and renamed Marinearsenal Warnowwerft.[15] The Wismar facility was sold to Thyssen Krupp Marine Systems. The Stralsund facility was sold to the City of Stralsund.[16]

Facilities

References

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