- The Nigeria LNG is reportedly negotiating with Hudong Zhonghua for mid-scale LNG carriers.
- Clarksons’ data for large LNG carriers (40,000 m and above) showed a fleet of 779 vessels and an orderbook of 278 units, equivalent to about 36 per cent of the fleet in numerical terms and just under 40 per cent on a capacity basis.
The Nigeria LNG is reportedly negotiating with Hudong Zhonghua for mid-scale LNG carriers, signalling renewed fleet modernisation against a subdued global order book.
As part of its fleet modernisation programme, Nigeria LNG Ltd is negotiating the acquisition of three 74,000-m³ LNG carriers from China’s Hudong Zhonghua Shipbuilding, with options for three more vessels, according to BRL’s latest newbuilding report.
The ships are expected to be delivered from 2029 and will trade under the Nigeria LNG subsidiary, Bonny Gas Transport.
The prospective contracts come against the backdrop of an LNG carrier segment that remains heavily committed to forward capacity.
Clarksons’ data for large LNG carriers (40,000 m and above) showed a fleet of 779 vessels and an orderbook of 278 units, equivalent to about 36 per cent of the fleet in numerical terms and just under 40 per cent on a capacity basis. While the order book remained elevated, new contracting in 2025 has slowed sharply.
Clarksons estimated orders for large LNG carriers in the first 10 months of the year totalled 3.1 million m, a 76 per cent year-on-year decline, with gas carrier contracting across the board about 56 per cent below the 10-year average in capacity terms.
In that context, Nigeria LNG’s move to add a series of mid-scale units at Hudong would represent a relatively rare addition to this year’s LNG carrier intake. More broadly, global newbuild activity has moderated from 2024’s exceptional pace.
Across all vessel types, 1,392 ships of 94.8M, Deadweight Tonnage (DWT) and 37.9M compensated gross tonnage (cgt) were reported ordered in January–October 2025, down 45 per cent in DWT and 43 per cent in cgt terms year-on-year, although broadly aligned with the 10-year average.
Nevertheless, the order book at the start of November 2025 remained high at 6,246 ships of 405.1M DWT, around 16 per cent of the fleet, with LNG carriers among the segments showing the highest orderbook-to-fleet ratios.
Chinese yards were central to this picture, accounting for 59 per cent of global contracting in cgt terms in the year to October 2025 and holding 61 per cent of the world order book by cgt, underlining their position as the dominant provider of new capacity across bulk, tanker, container, and gas segments.
Hudong Zhonghua featured among the leading LNG carrier builders, with a multi-year backlog of large gas tonnage extending into the latter part of the decade.
The BRL added that more LNG carriers are expected to be ordered by Nigeria LNG as part of its wider fleet modernisation effort. Any follow-on tonnage would further reinforce both China’s role in LNG new building and the still-significant forward exposure of the global LNG carrier sector.