
Fincantieri’s yard in Trieste. Credit: Fincantieri



By Emmanuel Jarry
PARIS, Jan 4 (Reuters) – A leading French minister expressed support on Wednesday for a bid by Italy’s Fincantieri’s for shipbuilder STX France, adding that the government would aim to keep the shipbuilder’s main site running at Saint Nazaire.
“We said we wanted a European, industrial company … Fincantieri is a European, industrial company. So it would be hard for us to say ‘no’ to them,” French Industry Minister Christophe Sirugue told RMC Radio.
The sale of STX France, which specialises in building cruise ships at the Saint-Nazaire shipyard and is profitable, forms part of a broader sell-off of businesses following the demise of the South Korean STX shipbuilding group.
The French state owns 33 percent of STX France, and Sirugue said the government was keen to keep the Saint Nazaire site in the west of the country.
Italy’s 230-year old Fincantieri makes a wide range of vessels from cruise ships to military aircraft carriers, and acquiring STX France would boost its presence in the cruise shipbuilding part of the market.
Sirugue said France wanted state-controlled military shipbuilder DCNS, in which Thales holds around 35 percent, to take a minority stake in STX France that would definitely be below 50 percent of the company.
Saint Nazaire’s high point last year was production of the largest passenger ship ever built, the ‘Harmony of the Seas’. (Reporting by Emmanuel Jarry; Writing by Sudip Kar-Gupta; Editing by Richard Balmforth)

STX France and MSC Cruises have announced they have finalized the contracts for two new 177,000-ton cruise ships for MSC.
The two next-generation ships will be the largest ever built for a European cruise line.
Delivery is scheduled for 2019 and 2020, respectively.
The ships will be known as the “Meraviglia-Plus” class, an evolution of the smaller 167,000 GRT “Meraviglia” class. The first of two “Meraviglia” ships are scheduled to enter into service in June 2017. The will have capacity for 6,300 passengers in 2,450 cabins.
“I am extremely pleased to see us continuing to deliver against our industrial plan with the coming into force of the final contract for the two “Meraviglia-Plus” ships,” said Pierfrancesco Vago, Executive Chairman of MSC Cruises. “I view this as a further reflection of the strength of the relationship in place from day one between MSC Cruises and STX France. It is for this reason that, in addition to having built at STX France all twelve of our existing ships, through 2026 up to eight more are currently planned to be built in France at STX.”
MSC Cruises said the two units finalized this week are part of the company’s €9 billion investment plan for eleven new next-generation cruise ships to coming into service by 2026