A newly shared image from a major Chinese state-owned shipyard has fueled speculation that China may be developing an enormous new naval support vessel.
The photo, published by the China State Shipbuilding Corporation during a social media post marking a traditional Chinese solar term, showed a giant hull sitting inside a dry dock in the background. Military analysts and online observers quickly began debating whether the vessel could be a next-generation auxiliary ship designed to expand the logistical reach of the People’s Liberation Army Navy.
Visible sections of the ship, including what appeared to be largely completed upper deck and island superstructures, suggested that construction is already at an advanced stage and that the vessel could soon move on to final outfitting and sea preparations.
Limited overseas bases increase need for support ships
China’s growing focus on long-range naval operations has fueled theories that the newly spotted vessel could be a massive replenishment ship designed to support extended deployments far from home waters. As the People’s Liberation Army Navy expands its presence across the Indo-Pacific and beyond, analysts say Beijing increasingly depends on large auxiliary vessels to sustain fleets at sea.
Unlike the US, China operates only a limited number of overseas military bases, making logistical support ships essential for transporting fuel, ammunition, food, water and other supplies needed for prolonged blue-water missions, the South China Morning Post writes.
China’s carrier strike groups currently rely on a small fleet of fast combat support vessels to sustain operations at sea, including two 45,000-tonne Type 901 Fuyu-class ships alongside the smaller and slower Type 903 Fuchi-class replenishment vessels.
However, growing expectations that Beijing is developing a new “super carrier” have intensified speculation that the People’s Liberation Army Navy will require a larger generation of supply ships capable of supporting more demanding long-range deployments. Analysts believe such vessels would form a critical logistical backbone for future Chinese naval operations across distant waters.
China’s next-generation supply ship
Fresh details about the mysterious vessel emerged last month after defense intelligence firm Janes analyzed commercial satellite imagery captured in March. According to the report, the ship is under construction at the Longxue shipyard in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou.
Analysts estimated the vessel measures roughly 890 feet in length and about 121 feet in width, making it significantly larger than most existing naval replenishment ships. Janes said the design appears intended to support carrier strike groups by transporting fuel, ammunition and other critical supplies during long-range operations.
Based on the ship’s reported size, defense analysts believe the vessel could displace between 60,000 and 65,000 tons, potentially making it larger than the retired US Navy Sacramento-class fast combat support ships, which displaced about 53,000 tons.
Satellite images captured in March showed the vessel without its superstructure, indicating that major sections were installed within just the past two months. Observers added the rapid pace of construction highlights the speed of China’s naval shipbuilding program.