Samsung's Latest Vessel Dwarfs Aircraft Carriers
By wchung | 23 Apr, 2026
Samsung Heavy's floating LNG processor Prelude is nearly a mile long and displaces as much water as the six largest aircraft carriers combined.
Korean shipbuilder Samsung Heavy Industries has set a new benchmark for large floating vessels with a tanker-like floating facility that has the same displacement as six of the world’s largest aircraft carriers.
Samsung floated the liquefied natural gas (LNG) platform Prelude at its Geoje shipyard on November 30. The vessel is 488 meters (1,601 feet) long — about nine-tenths of a mile — 110 meters high — the height of a 33-story building — and 74 meters wide.
When it is completed for delivery to Shell in September 2016 it will weigh over 600,000 tons fully loaded, displacing the same amount of water as six of the world’s largest aircraft carriers.
It will go into operation off the coast of western Australia to produce 3.6 million tons of LNG per year. The LNG will be stored in Prelude’s tanks which will have the same capacity as 175 Olympic-size swimming pools.
The Prelude isn’t a ship because it doesn’t have a propulsion system. Instead it will be towed by tugboats to its station where it will remain in service for 25 years. It is built to withstand category-five hurricanes.
Recent Articles
- US Farmers Bet on Peas and Lentils on GLP-1-Related Protein Maxxing Trend
- Lee's Visit Produces 73 S. Korea-Vietnam Business Deals
- Biggest IPO Wave Ever Creates $3 Trillion Value on Zero Profits
- Marijuana Products Reclassified As Less-Dangerous Drug
- China's Global EV Push Backed by Ambition and Hard Domestic Landscape
- Keurig Dr Pepper Beats As Strong Beverage Demand Offsets Coffee Weakness
- Huawei to Invest $2.6 Billion for Leadership in Smart Driving Tech
- Iran Shows Off Control over Strait with Action Video Footage
- Pot Shares Rally After Reclassification of Marijuana
- Tesla Becomes 1st Major Customer for Intel's 14A Chipmaking Process
