India tops global ship recycling by gross tonnage, Sonowal opens Goa port terminal

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India tops global ship recycling by gross tonnage, Sonowal opens Goa port terminal

Synopsis

India has clinched the top spot in global ship recycling by gross tonnage — a first that combines industrial scale with environmental compliance. The same day, Minister Sonowal inaugurated a ₹48.87 crore port terminal in Panaji and announced the Goa Water Metro's elevation to Phase-I priority, signalling a broad maritime push well beyond headline rankings.

Key Takeaways

India has become the world's No.
1 ship recycling nation by gross tonnage, according to an official statement dated 27 June .
Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal inaugurated Goa's new Captain of Ports Terminal Building in Panaji , built at a cost of ₹48.87 crore across 4,405+ sq metres .
India's vessel turnaround time has fallen from 95 hours to 41 hours since 2014; seafaring workforce now exceeds 3.23 lakh .
Operational National Waterways have grown from 3 to 32 ; coastal cargo and cruise traffic have more than doubled and quadrupled respectively.
Mormugao Port Authority has completed projects worth ₹1,300+ crore since 2014, with ₹2,000+ crore in projects under implementation.
The Goa Water Metro has been moved to Phase-I implementation priority .

India has become the world's leading ship recycling nation by gross tonnage, according to an official statement released on Saturday, 27 June. The milestone underscores the country's growing commitment to environmentally responsible and internationally compliant maritime operations.

New Goa Port Terminal Inaugurated

Union Minister of Ports, Shipping and Waterways Sarbananda Sonowal inaugurated Goa's new Captain of Ports Terminal Building in Panaji on Saturday. The waterfront facility, built at a cost of ₹48.87 crore, spans more than 4,405 square metres and was developed by the Goa State Infrastructure Development Corporation (GSIDC). It replaces the existing Captain of Ports office, which had become insufficient for the department's expanding operational demands.

Sonowal described the inauguration as more than a routine handover. 'Today, we are dedicating much more than a building. We are dedicating a symbol of Goa's maritime identity, its commitment to modernisation and its vision for a sustainable and people-centric future,' he said.

India's Maritime Transformation Over 12 Years

Sonowal outlined the scale of India's maritime growth since 2014, attributing the gains to policy momentum under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Port capacity has nearly doubled, and vessel turnaround time has been cut sharply — from 95 hours to 41 hours. India's seafaring workforce now exceeds 3.23 lakh, coastal cargo movement has more than doubled, and cruise passenger traffic has grown more than fourfold. Operational National Waterways have expanded from 3 to 32.

Notably, India's rise to the top of global ship recycling rankings by gross tonnage reflects both industrial capacity and regulatory alignment with international environmental standards — a combination that has historically been difficult to achieve in the sector.

Goa's Maritime Ambitions

The minister praised Goa for leading state-level maritime reforms, noting it was the first state to implement the Inland Vessels Act, 2021. Sonowal also flagged the proposed Goa Maritime Board, a Goa Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Policy, and a Maritime Master Plan as the next pillars of the state's maritime ecosystem.

At Mormugao Port Authority, infrastructure projects worth more than ₹1,300 crore have been completed since 2014, with projects exceeding ₹2,000 crore currently under implementation. The proposed Goa Water Metro project has been elevated to Phase-I implementation priority, the minister announced.

Key Attendees

The inauguration was attended by Goa Chief Minister Dr Pramod Sawant, Union Minister of State for Power Shripad Naik, Goa Minister for Captain of Ports Digambar Kamat, and Goa Minister for River Navigation Subhash Phal Dessai, among other officials.

With ship recycling leadership confirmed and a raft of maritime infrastructure projects in motion, India's position as a serious player in global maritime governance appears set to deepen further in the coming years.

Point of View

But the more revealing story is the regulatory one — the sector has long been dogged by environmental and labour concerns under the Hong Kong Convention framework. Whether India's leadership position is built on full compliance or competitive cost advantages that cut corners on safety standards is a question the official statement does not address. Separately, the Goa maritime push — Water Metro, Maritime Board, Ship Repair Policy — looks ambitious on paper, but Goa's port ecosystem has historically struggled with execution timelines. The real test will be whether the Maritime Master Plan translates into contracted infrastructure rather than policy documents.
NationPress
27 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

How did India become the world's leading ship recycling nation?
India topped global ship recycling rankings by gross tonnage, according to an official government statement on 27 June 2025. The achievement reflects expanded recycling capacity at yards — primarily in Alang, Gujarat — alongside efforts to align with international environmental and safety standards.
What is the new Captain of Ports Terminal Building in Panaji?
It is a ₹48.87 crore waterfront facility spanning over 4,405 square metres, developed by the Goa State Infrastructure Development Corporation (GSIDC) in Panaji. It replaces the old Captain of Ports office and is designed to strengthen maritime administration, vessel monitoring, and navigation support.
What progress has India's maritime sector made since 2014?
Since 2014, India's port capacity has nearly doubled, vessel turnaround time has dropped from 95 hours to 41 hours, the seafaring workforce has grown to over 3.23 lakh, and operational National Waterways have expanded from 3 to 32. Coastal cargo and cruise passenger traffic have also more than doubled and quadrupled respectively.
What is the Goa Water Metro project?
The Goa Water Metro is a proposed water-based urban transit project that has been elevated to Phase-I implementation priority, as announced by Union Minister Sonowal on 27 June. Further operational details are yet to be disclosed.
What maritime policy initiatives are planned for Goa?
The state is working toward establishing a Goa Maritime Board, a Goa Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Policy, and a Maritime Master Plan. Goa was also the first state in India to implement the Inland Vessels Act, 2021.
Nation Press
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