Difference between revisions of "Cost estimation"
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* [http://www.ds-t.com/trade_shows-cd/ProteusEngineeringCOMPITPaper2004.pdf A Practical Approach for Ship Construction Cost Estimating] | * [http://www.ds-t.com/trade_shows-cd/ProteusEngineeringCOMPITPaper2004.pdf A Practical Approach for Ship Construction Cost Estimating] | ||
* [http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/maritime/maritime_industrial/doc/Shipbuilding_IPR_Study.pdf Paper on IP issues] has materials 60-70% in table 6.1 | * [http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/maritime/maritime_industrial/doc/Shipbuilding_IPR_Study.pdf Paper on IP issues] has materials 60-70% in table 6.1 | ||
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+ | ==Other links== | ||
+ | [http://www.seasteading.org/interact/forums/community/general-chat/used-ships Used Ships] |
Revision as of 14:24, 27 June 2008
A couple of sources indicate that for ship building the materials are roughly half the costs and the labor and overheads are roughly half the cost. This means that we could estimate the costs as simply twice the steel cost. If steel is $1/kg and our structure is 500,000 kg, then a materials cost of $500,000 and a total cost of $1,000,000 could be estimated.
This sort of shipyard estimate does not include design costs. It is also just for the structure. Any solar power, engines, kites, sea anchors, furniture, electronics, etc are not part of this. It is also based on large ships. The shipyards overheads will be a higher percentage for a small vessel.
Links to plate steel prices for ship building
Links to ship cost estimation
- Maritime Economics by Martin Stopford
- A Practical Approach for Ship Construction Cost Estimating
- Paper on IP issues has materials 60-70% in table 6.1