Finnish maritime cluster

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Freedom of the Seas under construction in February 2006, surrounded by sea ice

The Finnish maritime cluster is a cluster of companies in maritime industries in Finland. In 2001 the total turnover was estimated at 11.4 billion euros and it employed 47,000 people.

History

Small trading ships similar to Jacobstads Wapen were built in Finnish coastal towns in the 18th century. Small-scale shipyards continued to exist well into the 20th century. The first large scale shipyard was the galley dry dock at Sveaborg built in the mid-18th century, which serviced the ships that won one of the largest sea battles in Finnish history.

The first shipyard in Turku was established in 1732. After the Crimean War, William Crichton acquired a workshop and built a new shipyard, which later was merging smaller shipyards and developed into Crichton-Vulcan, merged with Wärtsilä between 1936 and 1938.

Soviet trade

A major boost to Finnish shipbuilding was the war reparations paid to the Soviet Union after World War II. They forced a rapid industrialization of Finland and the creation of a large metal industry in addition to the traditional papermaking and forest industries.[1] By 1953, the shipbuilding industry had six times the capacity it did in 1944.[2]

Bilateral trade with the Soviet Union forced Finnish shipyards to build ships with a high percentage of total value of Finnish origin.[citation needed] All major components of the finished products needed to be produced domestically. The high percentage of domestic components continues even after the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the lucrative trade deals. While ships built in other European shipyards are a collection of components from around Europe and around the world, ships built in Finland can have up to 90% of their total value in Finnish components and labor (kotimaisuusaste).[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

Major companies

File:Rauma dockyard in summer.jpg
Former Hollming, now STX Europe dockyard in Rauma, Finland, where Rolls-Royce plant is co-located

Ships

File:Jäänmurtajia Katajanokan laiturissa.jpg
Six Finnish icebreakers docked for the summer season at Katajanokka, Helsinki
The Mir submersible

Icebreakers

Submarines

Cruise liners

Cruiseferries

Warships

References

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External links