China State Shipbuilding Corporation
The China State Shipbuilding Corporation is a state-owned shipbuilding conglomerate of the People's Republic of China.
Background
CSSC is one of the top 10 defence groups in the PRC. It consists of various shipyards, equipment manufacturers, research institutes and shipbuilding-related companies that build both civilian and military ships. It owns some of the most well known shipbuilders in China, such as Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company, Jiangnan Shipyard, Hudong–Zhonghua Shipbuilding, Guangzhou Huangpu Shipbuilding and Guangzhou Wenchong Shipyard. Its subsidiary, China CSSC Holdings Limited, is listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, and in turn owns other subsidiaries including Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding. As of, CSSC builds a third of all ships in the world, making it the world's biggest shipbuilding conglomerate. All CSSC ships are built to military specifications, according to Chinese government doctrine.History
Early developments
In, the Sixth Ministry of Machine Building was created to oversee China's shipbuilding enterprises, which were predominantly engaged in military work. In, as part of defence industry reforms and "defence conversions", the ministry was converted into the China State Shipbuilding Corporation. CSSC remained under state control but was permitted to operate with "a degree of market-based economic autonomy". CSSC shifted the industry's focus to commercial work; by, 80% of output was to the civilian sector, and in, half of the commercial output was for export.Spinning off CSIC
In the late 1990s, economic reforms broke up state-owned monopolies and introduced "a limited amount of free-market competition" to improve the efficiency of defence industries. In, the China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation was spun off from CSSC. The shipbuilding industry was divided roughly along geographical lines: CSSC retained assets in the east and south, and CSIC gained control in the northeast and inland. Both reported to the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission. CSSC emerged as the smaller entity. Enterprises not affiliated with either conglomerate included shipyards owned by the People's Liberation Army, provinces, municipalities, foreign joint ventures, and Chinese shipping companies.Merging with CSIC
Preparations for merging CSIC and CSSC date back to at least, when Hu Wenming became CSSC's party secretary, in anticipation of an industry decline. Hu was a strong supporter of the merger; he was CSSC chairman from to, and then CSIC chairman from until his retirement in because of corruption. The decision to merge the conglomerates may have influenced not only by a slowing economy, but also the discovery of widespread corruption in CSIC and Hu's involvement in it.The CSIC and CSSC merger was approved by SASAC in, and occurred in ; the combined entity took the CSSC name. The reorganization was complete by. The new entity was the world's largest shipbuilder with 20% global market share and billion in assets.
In August 2025, CSSC announced it planned to absorb CSIC and take over as the sole listing on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The two companies accounted for nearly 17% of new orders in 2024 and the merged company had ~$18B in sales.
CSSC and CSIC together account for around 21 percent of global production capacity.
With this merger of the two state-controlled shipyards, Xi Jinpings government hopes to achieve efficiency gains and greater resilience to the turmoil in the industry triggered by US President Trump, writes the Wall Street Journal.
Trump wants to revive the U.S. shipbuilding industry after decades of decline. In 2024, China's market share was 53 % and the U.S. market share 0.1 %.