GRSE wins electric tug bid for Kolkata's Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port

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GRSE wins electric tug bid for Kolkata's Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port

Synopsis

GRSE — the shipyard behind India's record 118 warships — has now won the bid for a ₹40 crore battery-powered tug for Kolkata's SMP port. It is a small contract by value but a telling signal: India's premier defence shipbuilder is pivoting toward electric maritime infrastructure, ahead of a government mandate to replace all port tugs with electric vessels.

Key Takeaways

GRSE emerged the lowest bidder for a ₹40 crore electric tug for Kolkata's Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port on 25 June 2025 .
The tug will be 25 metres long, powered by Lithium Titanate Oxide (LTO) batteries , with a 15-tonne bollard pull and a top speed of 9 knots .
GRSE has already delivered a zero-emission electric ferry to West Bengal and is building 13 hybrid ferries for the state.
The government has announced that all port tugs in India will eventually be replaced by electric vessels.
GRSE has delivered more than 800 ships , including 118 warships — the highest by any Indian shipyard — and is currently building 9 warships and 30 commercial platforms .

Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE) Limited has emerged the lowest bidder for the construction and delivery of a 15-tonne Bollard Pull (BP) Electric Tug for Kolkata's Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port (SMP), officials confirmed on Thursday, 25 June. The contract marks another step in GRSE's expanding green shipbuilding portfolio, as India's ports push toward decarbonisation.

Vessel Specifications

The electric tug will measure 25 metres in length with a beam of 8 metres, designed for harbour assistance and towing operations. Powered entirely by Lithium Titanate Oxide (LTO) batteries, it will deliver a static ahead bollard pull of 15 tonnes, reach a maximum speed of 9 knots, and sustain two hours of continuous operation. The vessel will also come with its own shore power charging infrastructure, and is estimated to cost around ₹40 crore.

Green Shipbuilding Push

The project must be built to International Association of Classification Societies (IACS) classification standards and incorporate advanced battery-propulsion technology — significantly cutting emissions and contributing to cleaner port operations. A senior official noted that while ₹40 crore is a modest sum for a shipyard that builds warships worth thousands of crores, the strategic importance lies elsewhere. 'The government has announced all tugs in the country will get replaced by electric ones in the years to come,' the official said, underscoring the broader national maritime decarbonisation agenda.

This comes amid GRSE's deepening engagement with green vessel technologies. The shipyard has already delivered a zero-emission fully electric ferry to the West Bengal government and is currently building 13 hybrid ferries for the same client. Notably, it is also working on 12 multi-purpose vessels for a German company, four of which will feature green propulsion systems.

GRSE's Defence and Commercial Track Record

Founded as a Defence Public Sector Undertaking (DPSU) in 1960, GRSE has built more than 800 ships across various classes — including 118 warships delivered to the Indian Navy, the Indian Coast Guard, and friendly foreign nations. This is the highest number of warships delivered by any single shipyard in India. The most recent milestone came on 21 July, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi commissioned three GRSE-built warships into the Navy: INS Dunagiri, INS Sanshodhak, and INS Agray.

Current Order Book

GRSE is presently working on nine warships and 30 commercial platforms. The warship pipeline includes four Next Generation Offshore Patrol Vessels (NGOPVs). The shipyard is also in advanced stages of finalising a contract for the construction of five Next Generation Corvettes (NGCs) — a prestigious addition to its defence portfolio. The electric tug for SMP Kolkata adds a commercially and symbolically significant green vessel to an already diverse order book.

Point of View

GRSE is positioning itself early in what could become a significant domestic green-vessel market. The strategic risk is execution at scale: building zero-emission ferries for West Bengal and a single electric tug is one thing; meeting a nationwide port electrification timeline is quite another. GRSE's dual track — warships and green commercial vessels — is a hedge, but it also stretches an organisation already managing nine warships and 30 commercial platforms simultaneously.
NationPress
26 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the electric tug GRSE has bid for at Kolkata port?
GRSE has emerged the lowest bidder for a 15-tonne Bollard Pull electric tug for Kolkata's Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port, estimated to cost around ₹40 crore. The vessel will be 25 metres long, battery-powered using Lithium Titanate Oxide technology, and designed for harbour assistance and towing.
Why is the government replacing port tugs with electric vessels?
The Indian government has announced a policy to replace all tugs at ports across the country with electric alternatives in the coming years, as part of the broader maritime decarbonisation push. The SMP Kolkata electric tug is among the early projects under this initiative.
What other green vessels has GRSE built?
GRSE has delivered a zero-emission fully electric ferry to the West Bengal government and is currently constructing 13 hybrid ferries for the same client. It is also building 12 multi-purpose vessels for a German company, four of which will use green propulsion systems.
What is GRSE's overall shipbuilding track record?
Since becoming a Defence Public Sector Undertaking in 1960, GRSE has built over 800 ships, including 118 warships for the Indian Navy, Indian Coast Guard, and friendly foreign nations — the highest by any Indian shipyard. It is currently working on 9 warships and 30 commercial platforms.
Which warships did PM Modi recently commission from GRSE?
Prime Minister Narendra Modi commissioned three GRSE-built warships on 21 July — INS Dunagiri, INS Sanshodhak, and INS Agray — into the Indian Navy.
Nation Press
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