Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
Creed 01
An Outline of the Company
Cover 02
Outline 03
Objects of the Company 04
Brief History 05
Foundation 06
CI Statement 07
Stock
Cover 08
Stock Information,Major Shareholders,Classified by Types of Shareholders 09
Board of Directors and Corporate Officers
Cover 11
Board of Directors and Corporate Officers 12
Organization Chart
Cover 16
Organization Chart 17
Statement of Accounts
Cover 18
Statement of Accounts (Consolidated) 19
Statement of Accounts (Non-consolidated) 26
Personnel
Cover 28
Personnel 29
Business Segments & Divisions
Cover 31
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development 32
Power Systems 41
Nuclear Energy Systems 47
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems 52
Transportation Systems Division 63
Aerospace Systems 65
General Machinery & Special Vehicles 71
Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems 76
Machine Tool 81
Works
Cover 85
Nagasaki Shipyard & Machinery Works 86
Kobe Shipyard & Machinery Works 87
Shimonoseki Shipyard & Machinery Works 88
Yokohama Dockyard & Machinery Works 89
Takasago Machinery Works 90
Nagoya Aerospace Systems Works 91
Nagoya Guidance & Propulsion Systems Works 92
Hiroshima Machinery Works 93
Approach for Solutions Business
Cover 95
Establishment of Engineering Headquarters 96
EPC and Solutions Examples 99
Research & Development
Cover 100
Research & Development Organization 101
Research & Development Centers 102
Recent Main Research & Development Activities 103
Research & Development Costs 105
Technical License Agreements 106
Intellectual Property 107
Group Companies of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Cover 108
Group Companies of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. 109
Group Business Status 110
Statement of Overseas Activities
Cover 119
Overseas Network 120
Overseas Sales 121
Major Supply Records 122
Society & Environment
Cover 130
Corporate Social Responsibility 131
Management 132
Environmental Report 135
Social Report 137
Mitsubishi Minatomirai Industrial Museum
Cover 138
Mitsubishi Minatomirai Industrial Museum 139
Address List
Cover 141
Address List 142
PR materials
Cover 148
PR materials 149
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1
Ⅰ. An Outline of the
Company
Outline
Objects of the Company
Brief History
Foundation
CI Statement
2
2
Ⅰ. An Outline of the Company
1. Outline
■Head Office :
2-16-5 Konan, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 108-8215 Japan
Phone : 81-3-6716-3111
Fax : 81-3-6716-5800
■President :
Hideaki Omiya
■Foundation :
July 7, 1884
■Establishment :
January 11, 1950
■Capital :
265.6 bil. yen (As of March 31, 2012)
■Orders Received :
3,188.8 bil. yen (consolidated basis, April 1, 2011 - March 31, 2012)
2,447.5 bil. yen (non-consolidated basis, April 1, 2011 - March 31, 2012)
■Sales :
2,820.9 bil. yen (consolidated basis, April 1, 2011 - March 31, 2012)
2,176.5 bil. yen (non-consolidated basis, April 1, 2011 - March 31, 2012)
■Domestic Offices :
8
■Works :
14
■Overseas Offices :
10
■Employees :
32,494 (As of March 31, 2012)
3
3
Ⅰ. An Outline of the Company
(2) manufacture, sale and repair of special motor vehicles, railway rolling-stock and special
armored vehicles;
(3) manufacture, sale and repair of aircraft, space systems and missiles;
(4) manufacture, installation, sale and repair of turbines, boilers, internal combustion
engines, hydraulic turbines, nuclear equipment and other power systems;
(5) manufacture, installation, sale and repair of iron and steel manufacturing machinery,
ceramic machinery, mining machinery, chemical machinery, textile machinery, pulp and
paper making machinery, box making machinery, printing machinery, plastic processing
machinery, rubber and tire machinery, machine tools and tools, construction machinery,
refrigerating machinery, air-conditioning machinery, agricultural machinery, machinery
for cargo-hoisting and transportation, food machinery, packing machinery, blowers,
compressors, wind tunnels, hydraulic machinery, oil hydraulic equipment, pneumatic
control equipment, electric and electronic machinery and equipment, medical machinery
and various other machinery, equipment and apparatus for industrial and general use;
(6) manufacture, installation, sale and repair of air pollution prevention equipment, water
corruption prevention equipment, solid waste treatment equipment and other pollution
prevention and environmental improvement equipment;
(7) manufacture, installation, sale and repair of bridges, hydraulic gates, stacks, offshore
facilities and other steel structures and various iron works;
(9) design, observation and execution of civil engineering and construction work;
(10) lease, engineering and technical assistance for those items mentioned in the foregoing
sub-paragraphs and manufacture and sale of parts thereof;
(15) all businesses incidental or relating to those items mentioned in the foregoing
subparagraphs.
4
4
Ⅰ. An Outline of the Company
3. Brief History
Nagasaki Forge of
Tokugawa Shogunate
1857
Government-owned
Nagasaki Iron Works
[Origin] 1870 Tsukumo Shokai
1868
Mitsubishi Shokai
1873
Mitsubishi-sha, Ltd.
1886
Shipbuilding Division of
Mitsubishi Goshi Kaisha
1907
Mitsubishi Internal
Combustion Engine Mfg. Co., Ltd.
1920
Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
Mitsubishi Internal
1921 Combustion Engine Co., Ltd.
1921
Mitsubishi-sha, Ltd. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. Mitsubishi Aircraft Co., Ltd.
1937 1934 1928
Mitsubishi-honsha, Ltd.
5
Ⅰ. An Outline of the Company
4. Foundation
6
Ⅰ. An Outline of the Company
5. CI Statement
We have established our CI (Corporate Identity) statement for the purpose of briefly
expressing our existence value, delivering both inside and outside the company. The
statement — “Our Technologies, Your Tomorrow” — represents our intention to “continuously
provide an assured future where people can live safe, secure and enriched lives through
technologies that can excite people and passion as a manufacturer for the sustainability of
the earth and humankind.”
7
Ⅱ. Stock
Stock Information
Major Shareholders
Classified by Types of Shareholders
8
Ⅱ. Stock
Stock
■Shareholders
Number of shareholders 326,915 persons
Average holdings per person 10,320 shares
9
Ⅱ. Stock
(2.08%)
(0.91%)
(1.14%)
(1.87%)
(2.15%)
(1.54%) (0.01%)
(1.26%)
(Less than 0.01%)
(1.17%)
10
Ⅲ. Board of Directors and
Corporate Officers
11
Ⅲ. Board of Directors and
Corporate Officers
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Assistant to President, Head of The Presidential
Shunichi Miyanaga
Senior Executive Vice Administration Office
President
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Assistant to President, Head of Technology &
Yoshiaki Tsukuda
Senior Executive Vice Innovation Headquarters
President
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Hisashi Hara Head of Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
Executive Vice President
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Takashi Abe In charge of General Affairs, Legal and Personnel
Executive Vice President
Representative Director
Head of Machinery & Steel Infrastructure
(Member of the Board), Akira Hishikawa
Systems
Executive Vice President
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Takato Nishizawa Head of Engineering Headquarters
Executive Vice President
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Masafumi Wani Head of Power Systems
Executive Vice President
Representative Director
Head of General Machinery & Special Vehicles,
(Member of the Board), Atsushi Maekawa
Head of Sagamihara Machinery Works
Executive Vice President
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Shigero Masamori Head of Nuclear Energy Systems
Executive Vice President
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Takashi Kobayashi Head of Aerospace Systems
Executive Vice President
12
Ⅲ. Board of Directors and
Corporate Officers
Representative Director
(Member of the Board), Yoichi Kujirai In charge of Commercial Airplanes
Executive Vice President
Director
Yorihiko Kojima*1 Chairman of the Board of Mitsubishi Corporation
(Member of the Board)
Statutory Auditor Kichisaburo Nomura*2 Corporate Advisor of All Nippon Airways Co., Ltd.
13
Ⅲ. Board of Directors and
Corporate Officers
14
Ⅲ. Board of Directors and
Corporate Officers
Senior Vice President Terumasa Onaka Deputy Head of Nuclear Energy Systems
"*1" means an outside director as provided for in Article 2-15 of the Company Act.
"*2" means an outside statutory auditor as provided for in Article 2-16 of the Company Act.
15
Ⅳ. Organization Chart
16
Ⅳ. Organization Chart
Organization Chart
Management Audit Dept.. (As of October 1, 2012)
Presidential Administration Office
Administration Dept.
Business Risk Management Dept.
No.1 Strategic Business Promotion Dept. Nagasaki Shipyard & Machinery Works
No.2 Strategic Business Promotion Dept.
Representative Office for Asia Pacific Kobe Shipyard & Machinery Works
Jakarta Liaison Office
Taipei Liaison Office Shimonoseki Shipyard & Machinery Works
Engineering Headquarters
Yokohama Dockyard & Machinery Works
Businees Division
Power Systems Project Management Division Takasago Machinery Works
Environmental & Chemical Plant Project Management Division
Plant Engineering Division Nagoya Aerospace Systems Works
Board Plant Construction Division
of President Nagoya Guidance & Propulsion Systems Works
Directors
Kansai Office
Chubu Office Hiroshima Machinery Works
Executive
Kyushu Office
Committee Mihara Machinery Works
Hokkaido Office
Chugoku Office
Tohoku Office Sagamihara Machinery Works
Power Systems
Power Systems Service Division
Steam Turbine Technology & Production Integration Division
Wind Turbine Business Division
Marine Machinery & Engine Division
Aerospace Systems
Quality Assurance Division
Commercial Airplanes Division
Defense Aircraft Division
Guidance & Propulsion Division
Space Systems Division
Turbocharger Division
Engine Division
Forklift Division
Special Vehicle Division
Machine Tool
17
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
18
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
Orders
received 2,480.9 2,662.8 2,722.8 2,942.0 3,274.7 3,715.2 3,268.7 2,476.2 2,995.4 3,188.8
Net sales 2,593.8 2,373.4 2,590.7 2,792.1 3,068.5 3,203.0 3,375.6 2,940.8 2,903.7 2,820.9
Operating
income 115.3 66.6 14.7 70.9 108.9 136.0 105.8 65.6 101.2 111.9
Ordinary
income 78.1 29.7 12.5 50.3 83.0 109.5 75.3 24.0 68.1 86.1
Income
before income 66.1 50.1 16.3 52.3 83.7 101.3 64.9 28.1 39.4 69.8
taxes
Net income 34.3 21.7 4.0 29.8 48.8 61.3 24.2 14.1 30.1 24.5
Total assets 3,666.8 3,715.3 3,831.1 4,047.1 4,391.8 4,517.1 4,526.2 4,262.8 3,989.0 3,963.9
Net assets 1,270.9 1,324.4 1,309.9 1,376.2 1,446.4 1,440.4 1,283.2 1,328.7 1,312.6 1,306.3
Debt with 1,122.9 1,101.2 1,172.8 1,198.6 1,273.5 1,365.3 1,612.8 1,495.3 1,325.6 1,157.1
interest
Depreciation 97.0 99.8 99.1 100.8 106.7 129.2 153.8 140.4 134.4 126.2
Cash flows
from operating 50.0 134.2 1,07.0 73.9 158.7 161.8 79.5 117.9 337.8 200.3
activities
Cash flows
from investing -106.1 -95.3 -163.3 -104.0 -158.6 -193.0 -156.5 -180.7 -137.2 -47.0
activities
Free cash
flows -56.0 38.8 -56.2 -30.1 0 -31.2 -77.0 -62.7 200.5 153.3
Cash flows
from financing 59.3 -44.4 57.9 7.9 48.7 71.2 262.0 -105.2 -169.7 -183.6
activities
19
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
3,000
3,000
2,000
2,000
1,000
1,000
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
50 25
25
0
0
-25 -25
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
4,000
1,000
3,000
2,000
500
1,000
0 0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
500 0
-50
0 -100
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
20
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
Unit 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Return on % 2.7 1.7 0.3 2.2 3.5 4.3 1.8 1.1 2.4 1.9
equity
Return on
total % 0.9 0.6 0.1 0.8 1.2 1.4 0.5 0.3 0.7 0.6
assets
Operating
income % 4.4 2.8 0.6 2.5 3.5 4.2 3.1 2.2 3.5 4.0
ratio
Equity to
assets % 34.7 35.6 34.2 34.0 32.5 31.4 27.4 30.0 31.6 31.7
ratio
Price
earnings times 28.00 52.30 236.55 63.28 52.34 23.30 41.27 91.71 42.59 54.86
ratio
Earning
per share yen 10.14 6.46 1.20 8.85 14.56 18.28 7.22 4.22 8.97 7.31
Book value
per share yen 376.76 393.17 390.44 410.15 425.54 423.17 369.94 380.80 376.17 374.08
21
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
5.0 2.0
0.0 0.0
-5.0 -2.0
-10.0 -4.0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
6.0
40.0
4.0
30.0
2.0
20.0
0.0
-2.0 0.0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
22
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
23
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
24
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
25
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
Orders
received 2,050.7 2,159.2 2,202.0 2,318.3 2,586.6 2,903.1 2,462.7 1,938.7 2,159.1 2,447.5
Net sales 2,171.7 1,940.1 2,097.9 2,206.7 2,426.6 2,471.1 2,647.2 2,327.7 2,188.5 2,175.6
Operating
103.0 35.2 -9.7 38.2 71.6 94.9 56.9 47.1 62.6 54.6
income (loss)
Ordinary
65.1 7.5 -9.6 32.4 57.4 68.2 46.8 20.0 39.1 37.1
income (loss)
Income (loss)
before income 54.5 23.7 0.2 35.3 59.0 54.2 63.2 21.9 3.4 35.5
taxes
Net income
30.1 5.2 -2.0 26.1 39.5 34.4 44.8 18.4 10.6 12.9
(loss)
Total assets 3,071.6 3,139.9 3,288.8 3,587.7 3,743.2 3,839.7 3,898.7 3,695.6 3,454.6 3,439.8
Net assets 1,129.1 1,166.2 1,147.5 1,307.0 1,273.0 1,240.4 1,125.0 1,142.4 1,128.3 1,122.0
Unit 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Dividend
per share yen 6.0 6.0 4.0 4.0 6.0 6.0 6.0 4.0 4.0 6.0
26
Ⅴ. Statement of Accounts
2,500
3,000
2,000
2,000 1,500
1,000
1,000
500
0 0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
50 25
25
0
0
-25 -25
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
4,000
1,000
3,000
2,000
500
1 ,000
0 0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
27
Ⅵ. Personnel
28
Ⅵ. Personnel
1. Statement of Employees (Consolidated)
(Unit: person)
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development 5,946 5,796 5,707 5,531 5,388 5,285 5,196 5,035
Power Systems 14,163 13,949 13,665 13,749 14,218 15,070 15,978 17,296
Segment
(Unit: person)
(Notes)
2009 2010 2011 From FY2010 the segment categories have been changed to Shipbuilding & Ocean Development, Power Systems,
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development 4,969 4,767 3,980 Machinery & steel Infrastructure Systems, Aerospace Systems, General Machinery & Special Vehicles, and Others to
comply with the March 2009 revisions to the“Accounting Standard for Disclosures about Segments of an Enterprise and
Power Systems 18,633 19,412 18,754
Segment
Related Information” (ASBJ No. 17). Given this change, the upper table above presents the orders received and net sales
Machinery & Steel
Infrastructure Systems 7,570 10,324 8,914 by segment from FY2001 through FY2009 using the former segment categories, and the lower table above presents the
9,679 9,942 figures for FY2010 using the new segment categories.
Aerospace Systems 9,364
General Machinery &
Special Vehicles 17,777 9,000 9,052
Others 9,041 15,371 18,823
29
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
No. of employees 35,530 34,396 33,500 32,627 32,552 33,089 33,614 34,139 33,031 32,494
Average age 41.4 41.4 41.5 41.5 41.4 40.9 40.2 39.4 38.8 38.5
Average length of service 20.3 20.2 20.3 20.2 20.0 19.3 18.3 17.4 16.6 16.2
Average salary 7,216,070 7,267,280 7,300,750 7,272,617 7,482,699 7,588,310 7,568,830 7,267,210 7,201,076 7,365,904
(Notes) ※ Data of employees as of March 31 each year.
1. Employees on secondment to subsidiaries, non-regular employees, and part-time employees are not included.
2. Average salary is average monthly salary before tax from April to March, including non-standard wages but excluding
bonuses and other extra allowances.
Ⅵ. Personnel
3. Breakdown of Newly Hired Employees (Non-consolidated)
Engineer 331 307 309 323 420 525 614 515 368 252
Total 432 396 421 425 546 674 820 672 480 349
College of Technology graduates 56 29 46 52 68 93 135 108 83 45
High school graduates, other 39 37 38 40 82 108 148 109 65 35
Manufacturing employees 327 264 344 402 613 637 702 583 358 206
Total 854 726 849 919 1,309 1,512 1,805 1,472 986 635
※ No. of new graduates as of April 1st each year.
31
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
■Shipbuilding
Outline
The MHI Shipbuilding Division has delivered LNG carriers (Moss type, Membrane type), LPG
carriers, and VLCCs to support the transportation of energy resources, as well as a new
generation of container carriers, RO/RO passenger ferries, and pure car carriers to support
global logistics, based on more than a century of experience in advanced shipbuilding. The
Headquarters also produces large cruise ships that support people’s leisure activities, and
destroyers and submarines for national defense. Employing the very latest technologies,
the Division continues to develop highly reliable structures and high-performance hull forms
with optimally low energy consumption, while enhancing economical efficiency, reliability,
and safety through the development of technologies such as energy-saving propulsion plant
systems and maritime safety systems.
The advanced technology used in its repair and conversion works has been of paramount
importance in ensuring substantial economic improvements, as well as safe working
environments in the shipbuilding industry.
Main Products
Main Types of Newbuildings
Tankers: LNG carriers, LPG carriers, crude oil carriers (VLCC), etc.
Cargo ships: container carriers, RO/RO ships, heavy lifters, high-speed cargo ships
Passenger ships: cruise ships, RO/RO passenger ferries, high-speed ships
Industrial carriers: pure car and truck carriers, etc.
Special-purpose vessels: cable layers, survey/research/training ships, pollution-treatment
ships (oil-recovery ships), ships to collect sea-borne debris, spent fuel carriers, firefighting
ships, and pollution-prevention ships
Destroyers, submarines, patrol vessels: for the Ministry of Defense and Japan Coast Guard
Conversion:
Hull enlargement and hull shortening
32
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
Production History
Date Product
1887 Completed Japan’s first steel passenger and cargo ship, the YUGAO MARU.
1940 Completed the NITTA MARU and YAWATA MARU, two luxury passenger ships.
1942 Completed the MUSASHI, the world’s largest battleship.
1956 Nagasaki Shipyard & Engine Works became the world’s highest aggregate
launched gross tonnage work. Japan became the world’s top shipbuilding country.
1962 Completed the HAYASHIO, MHI's first submarine built after World War II.
1971
Completed three of the world’s largest high-speed container ships.
∼72
1974 MHI’s shipbuilding activities peaked, totaling an aggregate of 3,700,000 gross tons
(48 vessels) launched (including 19 VLCCs).
1982 Completed the RIVER BOYNE, the first of a new-generation of coal-fired steamships.
1983 Completed the large LNG carriers for LNG import from Indonesia.
1989 Completed the FUJI MARU, a large cruise passenger ship.
Completed the HAKUHO MARU, an advanced oceanographic research vessel.
1990 Completed the CRYSTAL HARMONY, the world’s most luxurious cruise ship.
1991 Completed the NEDLLOYD EUROPA, a hatch coverless container ship.
Completed the ASUKA, Japan’s largest cruise ship of the day.
1992 Completed the YAMATOⅠ, a superconductive electromagnetic propulsion ship.
1993 Completed the KONGO, an AEGIS destroyer.
Completed the RAINBOW, a hydrofoil catamaran.
1994 Completed the EVER RENOWN, a large container ship.
1996 Completed one of the world’s largest LNG carriers.
1997 Completed the UNICORN, one of the fastest mono-hull type high-speed car ferries.
1998 Completed the SUBARU, Japan’s largest cable layer.
2000 Completed the EUROPEAN CAUSEWAY, the first RO/RO Passenger Ferry for P&O.
Completed the LNG JAMAL, the first LNG carrier fitted with a re-liquefaction plant.
2002 Completed the PUTERI INTAN SATU, a membrane tank type LNG carrier.
2003 Completed 4 large high-efficiency high-speed domestic RO/RO ships.
33
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
Date Product
2004 Completed the DIAMOND PRINCESS and SAPPHIRE PRINCESS, the world’s
largest-class cruise ships.
Completed the world’s first high-speed ferries adopting hybrid CRP-POD propulsion
systems.
2007 Completed the MOL CREATION, high performance large size container ship.
2008 Completed the AURIGA LEADER, the first PCTC fitted with a 40kW solar power generation
system.
3
2009 Completed the SERI BALHAF, a 157,000m membrane tank type LNG carrier with
Dual-Fuel Diesel-Electric propulsion system.
2010 Completed the YAMATAI and YAMATO, the modular carrying vessels with Mitsubishi air
lubrication system. (MALS)
2011 Completed the TØNSBERG, the newest large RO/RO ships.
2012 Completed the HAKUREI, a marine resource research vehicle.
■Marine Structures
Outline
MHI’s Marine Structures Division manufactures a variety of equipment, facilities, and systems
related to marine research, surveys, and development, as well as offshore oil and gas
production. The Division also manufactures and develops a broad range of products and
technologies to meet society’s needs, including products and technologies for the expanded
and efficient development of port facilities, the exploration and recovery of ocean resources
and offshore oil fields, the use of marine space, and the prevention of ocean pollution.
Main Products
Offshore oil production facilities: floating, production, storage and off-loading barge, support
vessel for offshore oil development.
Offshore oil-loading facilities: oil-storage barges, single-point moorings, sea berths, offshore
CTS systems.
Others: deep-sea scientific riser drilling vessels, crane barges, oil- and gas-loading
facilities, multi-purposes service vessels, geophysical survey ships, submersible research
vessels, dredgers, underwater vehicles, underwater robots, floating intelligent buildings.
34
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
Production History
Date Product
1965 After building the SEDCO 135A, Japan’s first offshore drilling unit, MHI completes 16
∼86 semi-submersible type units, 6 jack-up type units, and 4 vessel type units.
1981 Completed the SHINKAI 2000, a 2,000m deep submersible research vehicle.
1988 Completed a tank ship to be used for an offshore oil storage facility at the Kami-Goto
Islands.
1989 Completed the SHINKAI 6500, a 6,500m deep submersible research vehicle.
1990 Completed the PUTERI DULANG, an 850,000bbls crude oil FSO vessel (FSO: floating
storage and offloading).
1993 Completed a DMCCS (deep-sea microorganism collecting and cultivating system) for
JAMSTEC (Japan Maritime Science and Technology Center).
1995 Completed the ANASURIA, an 850,000bbls crude oil FPSO vessel.
(FPSO: floating production, storage, and offloading)
1996 Completed a tank ship to be used for an offshore oil storage facility at the Shirashima
Islands.
1998 Completed FPSO conversion work for Japan Vietnam Petroleum Co., Ltd.
3
1999 Completed the ARUANGWA, a 1,000m trailing suction hopper dredger for the
Mozambican dredging company, EMODRAGA E. P.
2000 Completed BENKEI, a borehole reentry/observatory system.
2005 Completed the SEIRYUMARU, a trailing suction hopper dredger & oil recovery ship for the
Chubu Regional Development Bureau under the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and
Transport.
Completed the CHIKYU, a deep sea drilling vessel, for JAMSTEC (Japan Agency for
Marine-Earth Science and Technology).
3
Completed the MECCA, a 10,000m trailing suction hopper dredger for the Suez Canal
Authority.
3
2007 Completed the ALCANTARA SANTOS, a 1,000m trailing suction hopper dredger for the
Mozambican dredging company, EMODRAGA E. P.
■Engineering Division
Outline
In response to the rising demand for efficient high-performance vessels due to stricter
environmental regulations and rising fuel prices, MHI is carrying out package sales of
energy-saving equipment as a marine solutions provider and undertaking advanced marine
engineering, utilizing its product development technology gained through a long history of
working in shipbuilding and ocean products, its highly experienced design and engineering
staff, and its proven brand.
35
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
Main Products
○ Shipbuilding Engineering
Provision of design for high performance vessels / support for ship development and
performance improvement / shipbuilding optimization; technical support, process
management, dispatch of shipbuilding SVs.
○ Marine Solutions Provider
Mitsubishi air lubrication system (MALS) / ballast water treatment system engineering / gas
fuel supply system (MHI-GEMS) / SOx removal scrubbers / LNG recondensation devices and
open rack regas devices / LNG re-liquefaction units.
36
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
37
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
Others
Vessels Completed by Mitsubishi Shipyards
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Works G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT G/T DWT
No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.
(thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.) (thou.)(thou.)
Nagasaki domestic vessels ー ー ー ー ー ー 2 34 12 1 57 27 ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー 2 77 37 ー ー ー 1 160 305
Shipyard & export vessels 5 473 335 5 345 286 10 1,047 1,159 9 645 826 13 1,084 854 7 715 760 11 911 751 11 903 637 14 798 633 9 847 1,093
Machinery
Works total 5 473 335 5 345 286 12 1,081 1,171 10 702 854 13 1,084 854 7 715 760 11 911 751 13 981 675 14 798 633 10 1,007 1,398
Kobe domestic vessels ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー 1 5 4 ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー ー 2 121 37
Shipyard & export vessels 3 228 228 5 291 319 5 245 124 3 211 172 4 300 314 4 227 238 5 316 153 ー ー ー 6 470 476 3 217 177
Machinery
Works total 3 228 228 5 291 319 5 245 124 4 215 176 4 300 314 4 227 238 5 316 153 ー ー ー 6 470 476 5 337 215
Shimonoseki domestic vessels 3 20 9 7 102 40 2 13 5 3 29 12 5 57 25 5 76 32 3 32 15 ー ー ー ー ー ー 1 16 6
Shipyard & export vessels 2 31 16 ー ー ー 1 44 11 4 136 83 1 44 11 ー ー ー 2 88 22 4 175 44 4 130 27 3 116 27
Machinery
Works total 5 51 25 7 102 40 3 57 16 7 164 95 6 101 36 5 76 32 5 120 37 4 175 44 4 130 27 4 132 33
Grand total 13 752 588 17 737 645 20 1,383 1,311 21 1,082 1,124 23 1,485 1,204 16 1,019 1,030 21 1,347 941 17 1,156 719 24 1,398 1,136 19 1,477 1,647
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. 6.6 8.2 5.8 7.2 6.1 6.9 7.6
21 1,082 23 1,485 16 1,019 21 1,347 17 1,156 24 1,398 19 1,477
(2.3) (2.9) (1.8) (2.0) (1.5) (1.5) (1.5)
Universal Shipbuilding Corporation 28 1,974 12.0 23 1,842 10.2 30 2,018 11.5 23 2,077 11.1 24 2,056 10.9 25 2,570 12.7 22 2,184 11.3
IHI Marine United Inc. 14 1,213
7.4 17 1,156 6.4 11 854 4.9 19 1,214 6.5 10 1,046 5.5 17 1,203 6.0 22 1,289 6.7
Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Co., Ltd. 26 1,244
7.6 33 1,507 8.3 24 1,188 6.8 24 1,360 7.3 27 1,339 7.1 26 1,208 6.0 26 1,220 6.3
Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd. 12 934
5.7 15 1,141 6.3 10 544 3.1 13 796 4.3 11 800 4.2 13 712 3.5 15 842 4.3
Sumitomo Heavy Industries ME, Co., Ltd. 8 368
2.2 9 403 2.2 9 505 2.9 8 447 2.4 8 448 2.4 7 392 1.9 9 506 2.6
Total 109 6,814
41.5 120 7,534 41.6 100 6,128 35.0 108 7,241 38.8 97 6,845 36.2 112 7,482 37.1 113 7,517 38.8
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Domestic total 469 16,434 534 18,176 543 17,525 562 18,656 574 18,893 577 20,171 577 19,360
(35.0) (34.9) (30.6) (27.6) (24.6) (21.0) (19.1)
World total 2,129 46,970 100.0 2,447 52,118 100.0 2,782 57,320 100.0 3,242 67,690 100.0 3,445 76,914 100.0 3,706 96,012 100.0 3,706 101,501 100.0
Note: ( ) represents share of world total.
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
90
85
80
77.1
75
70 67.7
65
60
55 57.3
52.1
50
47.0
45
39.5
40
40.2 36.4
35.7
35 36.1
31.7
33.4
30 31.3 28.8
26.4
25
20.6 22.0
20 18.8
17.7
20.2
14.8 18.1 18.7 19.0 19.4
15 13.7 17.5
13.0 16.4
12.0
14.5 10.6 14.0
12.0 12.7
10 11.6 7.7
6.5
4.7
5 4.1 4.0 3.8
5.7
4.9 5.5
3.7 4.3 4.1 4.2 4.1
1.8 2.2 2.5
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Japan
Japan
19.1%
21.0%
世界竣工量
World total 世界竣工量
World total
China 合計
96.4mil.
China 合計
101.5mil.
37.7% 38.9%
GT GT
百万GT 百万GT
Korea Korea
32.9% 35.1%
39
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Shipbuilding & Ocean Development
(mil.GT)
380
368.1
370
360
350
340
329.7
330
320
310
300
300.5
290
280
270
260
261.0
250
240
230
220
208.9 217.0
210
200
190
180
170 164.0
160
150 146.2
140
130
120
112.2
110
100
90
80 75.8
70 74.9 63.8 63.6
60 56.9
51.9 52.0
49.7
50 42.5
40 36.0 34.3
30
20.8
20 24.0
10
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
40
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Power Systems
2. Power Systems
Outline
The Power Systems has long been designing, manufacturing, constructing and installing
power systems equipment such as boilers, steam turbines, gas turbines and wind turbines,
and delivering many of them to customers worldwide.
Major efforts are now focused on the development of technologies for new targets related
to energy conservation, new and renewable energy, and environmental protection. Through
these efforts, the Business Segments has already achieved major successes in technologies
for energy conservation, high-temperature and high-efficiency steam turbines, high-
temperature and high-efficiency gas turbines, GTCC (Gas Turbine Combined Cycle Power
Plants) with the world’s highest heat efficiency, and ultra-supercritical boilers. The Business
Segments has also developed outstanding technologies for coal gasification, wind and
geothermal power generation plants, lithium-ion batteries to meet new targets in the fields of
new and renewable energy, and flue gas DeNOx systems for environmental protection.
It also offers solutions (Project MEET) as environment-friendly and energy saving marine
propulsion plant system by combining some products such as marine diesels, boilers and
turbines, and MET turbochargers.
MHI's ongoing R&D efforts and abundant R&D experience have led to the realization of many
hundreds of power system technologies. In the field of gas turbines, the Power Systems
commercialized the “G” series gas turbine, the most advanced turbine in its class worldwide,
with an inlet temperature of 1,600°C. This technology is a milestone achievement for MHI’s
power system business in a world where the demand for gas turbine plants is rapidly
increasing.
MHI has created the world’s most advanced boiler technologies, including new systems
with vertical furnace walls with rifle tubing, once-through boilers, and low level pollution
combustion systems and De-NOx technologies for licensing overseas.
Main Products
41
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Power Systems
Production History
Date Product
1974 Completed a 2,350T/H supercritical pressure boiler for a 700MW power plant (then one of
Japan’s largest) (Chubu Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Completed a 3,180T/H supercritical pressure boiler for a 1,000MW power plant (then one of
Japan’s largest) (Tokyo Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1979 Completed a supercritical steam turbine for a 1,000MW power plant (then one of Japan’s
largest) (Tokyo Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1980 Delivered a 318MW Francis-type water turbine for a hydraulic power plant (the largest yet in
MHI’s export records) (Chicoasen Power Station, Mexico).
Delivered MHI’s first large thermal power plant on a full-turn-key contract basis (Harutha
Power Station 4×200MW, Iraq).
1981 Completed two of Japan’s largest coal-fired boilers for a 500MW power plant (Electric Power
Development Co., Ltd.).
1982 Completed the first MWT-250 wind turbine (300kW) (Kyushu Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1984 Completed 307MW Francis-type pump turbines for a hydraulic power plant (one of Japan's
highest heads yet) (Shikoku Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1984 Completed a 1,090MW large-capacity, high-efficiency, combined-cycle plant with domestic
∼85 technology (Tohoku Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1986 Completed the first MF-111, a gas turbine with high thermal efficiency (Mitsubishi Oil Co.,
Ltd.).
1987 Delivered a 151,000kW geothermal plant in the U.S.A. (then one of the world’s largest).
Completed a 145,000kW blast furnace gas-fired combined-cycle plant (world’s highest
output and efficiency) (Kawasaki Steel Corp.).
1988 Delivered MHI’s first export wind turbine, for Hawaii, U.S.A. (MWT-250, 37×250kW).
1989 Completed a 2,300T/H coal-fired boiler (one of Japan’s largest yet) for a 700MW power
plant (Kyusyu Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Completed a 2,150T/H ultra supercritical boiler (one of Japan’s largest yet) for a 700MW
power plant (Chubu Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Completed a 3,190T/H supercritical boiler (one of the world’s largest yet) (Tokyo Electric
Power Co., Inc.).
Delivered a 625MW thermal power plant for the Qurraya Power Station Phase I, Saudi
Arabia (the largest exported by MHI).
1990 Completed a 2, 400T/H soda recovery boiler (one of Japan’s largest yet) (Oji Paper Co.,
Ltd.).
42
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Power Systems
Date Product
1991 Delivered the first overseas 501F gas turbine, one of the world’s most efficient and highest-
output types, for the U.S.A.
1992 Completed the first 701F gas turbine (1,350°C-class, 50-cycle), one of the world’s most
efficient and highest-temperature types, for MHI’s Yokohama Dockyard & Machinery Works.
1994 Completed the 501F gas turbine (1,350°C-class 60-cycle), one of the world’s highest-class,
highest-temperature, and highest-efficiency types (Kyushu Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1995 Delivered one of the most efficient combined-cycle power plants (670MW), the fifth of its
type built, for Himeji Daiichi Power Plant (Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Completed the world’s largest-class 1 million kW coal-fired supercritical sliding pressure
operation boiler (130T/H mill x 6 units) (Soma Kyodo Power Plant).
Completed the world’s highest-temperature 500MW steam turbine (566°C/593°C) (Hokuriku
Electric Power Co.).
1996 Completed the 501G gas turbine, one of the world’s most efficient and highest-output (MHI
Takasago Machinery Works).
Delivered the first overseas 701F gas turbine, one of the world’s most efficient and highest-
output types (Wang Noi Stage 1 combined-cycle electric power plant in Thailand).
Completed operational research under a national project to develop a pilot plant for coal
gasification combined power generation (200t/day).
1997 Launched commercial operation of Position T, a 330MW combined-cycle power plant with
501G gas turbine (MHI Takasago Machinery Works).
Launched Japan’s first commercial combined-cycle power plant with pressurized fluidized
bed combustion (PFBC) (delivered PFBC, steam turbine, and gas turbine) (Hokkaido
Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Launched commercial operation of a 1,000MW coal-fired power plant using ultra
supercritical variable pressure (USVP) (Tohoku Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Delivered Japan’s largest combined-cycle power plant (1,650MW) (Chubu Electric Power
Co., Inc.).
1998 Delivered a highly efficient coal-fired power plant with an environment-friendly design.
(Chugoku Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Completed a vacuum residue (extra-heavy oil)-fired boiler (Koa Oil Co., Ltd.).
1999 Delivered the first combined-cycle power plant to use world’s most heat-efficient gas turbine,
the M701G (805MW, Tohoku Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Delivered the world’s largest class (75MW) diesel power plant, for the Electric Power
Agency in Kenya.
2000 Delivered a 1,440MW combined-cycle power plant using the M701F gas turbine (Tokyo
Electric Power Co., Inc.).
Delivered a KU diesel power plant (135MW) to Pakistani Japan Power Generation
(Independent Power Producer, IPP).
2001 Delivered fifty MWT-1000 wind turbines to the Rock River I project in the U. S. A.
43
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Power Systems
Date Product
2002 Establishment of two companies for electric power supply.
MHI Yokohama Power., Ltd.: Gas Engine
Seto Wind Hill Corporation: Wind Turbine
Delivered the first overseas M501G gas turbine project. (Ilijian combined-cycle power plant
(1,200MW) in the Philippines)
2003 Delivered the IGCC (431MW) Power plant to Nippon Petroleum Refining Co., Ltd.
Delivery record over 300 sets of KU series engines.
Delivered M501G combined-cycle power plant successively in the U.S.A.: Mystic
(1,600MW) and Fore River (800MW).
Delivered 41 MWT-1000A wind turbines (Combine Hills project) and 160 MWT-1000A wind
turbines (Brazos project).
2004 Completed the first electronically controlled marine diesel engine, the UEC Eco-Engine.
Delivery record of over 3,000 sets of fixed pitch propellers.
Established a joint venture for the manufacture of gas turbine components in China:
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Dongfang Gas Turbine (Guangzhou) Co., Ltd.
Launched operation of the world’s largest 1,000kWp amorphous type solar power plant: GP
solarpark (Buttenwiesen, Germany).
Delivered 1,000kWp amorphous type PV modules to world largest GP solarpark
(Buttenwiesen, Germany)
2005 Delivered the following for overseas FTK projects: Tuas Stage II combined-cycle power
plant (720MW) in Singapore, Port Dickson combined-cycle power plant (714.6MW) in
Malaysia.
Delivered 120 units of MWT-62/1.0 (MWT-1000A) wind turbines (Sun Juan Mesa project)
and 50 units of MWT-62/1.0 (MWT-1000A) wind turbines (Iowa Wind Power project).
2006 Completed the first M701F gas turbine project in China. (Beijing No. 3 combined-cycle
power plant (350MW))
Delivered 1,400kWp amorphous type PV modules to Toledo solar plant (Spain).
Established joint venture (Qingdao Qiyao Wartsila MHI Linshan Marine Diesel Company
Ltd.) of marine diesel business in China.
2007 Delivery record of over 5,000 sets of Marine boiler for propulsion, auxiliary marine boiler.
Delivery record of over 30,000,000 ps of UE diesel engine.
Delivered the following overseas projects:
Map Ta Phut power plant (2×717MW) in Thailand,
Blast furnace gas-fired combined cycle power plants in China at Anshan (300MW) and
Maanshan (150MW).
2008 Delivered one of the most efficient combined-cycle power plants (1,500MW), for KAWASAKI
Thermal Power Station Group1 (TOKYO ELECTRIC POWER CO., Inc).
Delivered 2,250kW of Amorphous type PV modules, and 750kW of Tandem PV modules to
Yeongju plant, located in Korea.
One of the largest PV systems (900kW) inside a theme park in Japan, Huis ten Bosch,
located in Nagasaki was installed with MHI’s Tandem PV modules.
44
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Power Systems
Date Product
2008 Commencement of commercial operation of Flagship Project (OR, U.S.A.), the first Project
in U.S.A. utilizing MWT92/2.4.
Commencement of commercial operation of the largest wind farm in Kyushu, named
Nagashima Wind Hill (MWT92/2.4×21Units). Accumulated wind turbine supply record has
exceeded 3,000 Units with this project.
Delivered Record of: U.S.A. MWT62/1.0×45Units Dillon Project
U.S.A. MWT62/1.0×209Units Roscoe Project
U.S.A. MWT62/1.0×80Units Goat Mountain Project
U.S.A. MWT62/1.0×180Units Bull Creek Project
U.S.A. MWT92/2.4×1Unit Flagship Project
Korea MWT62/1.0×3Units Shinan Project
Bulgaria MWT62/1.0×35Units Kaliakra Project
Japan MWT62/1.0×16Units Hirokawa Myojinyama Project
Japan MWT92/2.4×21Units Nagashima Project
Installed 800kW of Tandem PV modules in Isahaya plant.
Delivered M501G combined-cycle power plant for Shin-Nagoya thermal power station Group
8 of Chubu Electric Power Co., Inc.
2009 Delivered the Pacifico Power Plant (70MW coal fired supercritical pressure) for the Federal
Electricity Commission.
Delivered Record of: U.S.A. MWT95/2.4×29Units Goat Mountain2 Project
U.S.A. MWT92/2.4×84Units Penascal1 Project
U.S.A. MWT62/1.0×197Units Inadale Project
U.S.A. MWT95/2.4×118Units Gulf Wind Project
U.S.A. MWT62/1.0×63Units Combine Hills2 Project
Japan MWT92/2.4×4Unit Fukura1 Project
Japan MWT62/1.0×1Unit Muroran Project
Number of delivered gas turbines reached 500 units.
Delivered the M501F3 combined-cycle power plant (285 MW) for Mizushima Power
Station No. 1 of Chugoku Electric Power Co., Inc.
2010 Delivered Record of: U.S.A. MWT92/2.4×84Units Penascal2 Project
Achieved 5,000 hours of accumulated time for the long-term running test for the integrated
coal gasification combined cycle test plant of Clean Coal Power R&D Co., Ltd.
Delivered M701F4 combined-cycle power plant (446MW) for Sendai Power Station No. 4 of
Tohoku Electric Power Co., Inc.
Delivered MS01F3 combined-cycle power plant (296MW) for Sakaide Power Station unit
No. 1 of Shikoku Electric Power Co., Inc.
Delivered M501G combined-cycle power plants (2,000MW) for Sakaiko Power Station units
No.1 to 5 of Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.
2011 Gas turbine combustion device plant in Savannah, Georgia, U.S.A. in full-scale operation.
Delivered Record of: U.S.A. MWT95/2.4×62Units Elm Creek
U.S.A. MWT95/2.4×63Units Juniper Canyon Project
U.S.A. MWT62/1.0×2Units Safeway 2.0
Japan MWT92/2.4×4Units Fukura2 Project
45
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Power Systems
Chita,
Chubu
2,350T/H
700
The Kansai Electric Power
*Kashima, Himeji No.1 plant No.5
Tokyo Unit combined cycle power plant
1,950T/H 670MW
600
Kashima,
Tokyo Himeji No.II
600MW Kansai
600MW
500
*Chita,
Chubu Takasago,
1,700T/H Kansai
450MW
400
Chita, Chubu 1,225T/H Sakaide, Shikoku
Combined cycle power plant
Yokosuka, Tokyo 1,157T/H Goi, Tokyo
*Himeji No.II Kansai 1,060T/H 350MW
300 *Himeji No.II Kansai
*Yokosuka, Tokyo 325MW
908T/H
Shin-Nagoya, Chubu *Himeji No.II, Kansai
726T/H 250MW
200
Osaka, Kansai Yokohama, Tokyo
542T/H 175MW
*Chiba, Tokyo *Osaka, Kansai
435T/H 156MW
100 Meiko,
Chubu 250T/H Himeji No.I Kansai
75MW
Tsurumi No.II Tokyo 66MW, 300T/H
1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
Note: Captions represent the names of Power Stations and Electric Power Companies and *represents new record for capacity and output at that time.
46
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Nuclear Energy Systems
Outline
Since MHI began working on the development of nuclear power generation in 1957, it has
engaged in the development, design, production, construction, and post-operational service
of all domestic Japanese pressurized water reactor (PWR) plants. In December 2009, Tomari
Unit 3 for HEPCO, a state-of-the-art PWR plant, went into operation.
MHI has built twenty-four PWR plants in Japan, with a total generating capacity of
approximately 22,078 MWe. MHI is also proud of the top track record in Japan in the field
of the export of nuclear vessels, steam generators and other major components to other
countries. In addition, negotiations are underway for several new plants, including the large
1,700 MWe-class US/EU-APWR; the mid-sized 1,100 MWe-class ATMEA1, product of a joint
venture with France’s Areva; and an MPWR+ plant with improved safety for Vietnam, based
on the Tomari Unit 3 plant. All the MHI group companies cooperate together for the nuclear
fuel cycle field, including nuclear fuel supply, spent fuel reprocessing, fuel transportation,
fuel storage and waste treatment/disposal. MHI is also working on the development of next-
generation light-water reactors (HP-APWR), fast-breeder reactors (FBR), high-temperature
gas-cooled reactors and nuclear fusion reactors through various projects.
Immediately after the March 11, 2011 disaster from the Great East Japan Earthquake and
tsunami, MHI has proposed emergency safety countermeasures to the Japanese PWR
customers, and has been implementing all sorts of measures for safety improvement and
stress tests. It has also delivered the Mega-Float and radioactive waste storage facility
equipment etc. for TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, and is actively
participating in the TEPCO’s “Road Map” program.
Main Products
● PWR nuclear power plants: PWR, APWR, US-APWR, EU-APWR, ATMEA1, HP-APWR
nuclear reactors and turbines
● Advanced reactor plants: FBRs, HTGRs, nuclear fusion reactors, small modular reactors
● Nuclear fuel cycle plants: Spent fuel reprocessing equipment, radioactive waste treatment
plants, nuclear fuel flasks, uranium enrichment equipment
47
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Nuclear Energy Systems
Production History
Date Product
1970 Completed Japan’s ’ first PWR power plant (340MW), for the Mihama Power Station
Unit 1 (The Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1972 Completed Japan’s first domestically manufactured PWR power plant (500MW), for
the Mihama Power Station Unit 2 (The Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1974 Completed Japan’s ’ first three-loop class PWR power plant (826MW), for the
Takahama Power Station Unit 1 (The Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1979 Completed the world’s largest PWR power plant (1,175MW × 2) and the world’s first four-
loop plant, for the Ohi Power Station Unit 1 and 2 (The Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1984 Completed the first PWR power plant (890MW) under a project sponsored by the
Ministry of International Trade and Industry for the Improvement & Standardization
of the Sendai Nuclear Power Station Unit 1 (Kyushu Electric Power Co., Inc.).
1987 Adopted Japan’s first Containment Vessel made from prestressed concrete. Completed a PWR
power plant (1,160MW) for the Tsuruga Power Station Unit 2 (The Japan Atomic Power Co.).
1989 Completed Japan’s first 50Hz PWR power plant, for the Tomari Power Station Unit 1
(Hokkaido Electric Power Co., Inc.).
2010 Completed Tomari Power Station Unit 3 (Hokkaido Electric Power Co., Inc.) with the latest
technology such as Japan’s largest 54-inch low-pressure turbines and full degital I&C etc.
Tomari 1 2 3
Tsuruga 2
Mihama 1 2 3
Ohi 1 2 3 4
Takahama 1 2 3 4
Genkai 1 2 3 4
Sendai 1 2
Ikata 1 2 3
48
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Nuclear Energy Systems
Delivery record for major components of PWR nuclear power plant (As of Oct. 1. 2012)
Number manufactured and delivered (Units)
Equipment Total
Japan Units Overseas Units Units
Finland 1
Reactor vessel 24 28
China 3
U.S.A. 15
44 (Including those for
Reactor vessel head Sweden 3 63
replacement 20)
Brazil 1
28 (Including those for
Core internal ー 28
replacement 4)
U.S.A. 6
103 (Including those for
Steam generator Belgium 10 125
replacement 32)
France 6
24 (Including those for
Pressurizer U.S.A. 1 25
replacement 1)
Reactor coolant pump 71 China 8 79
Spain 1
Slovenia 1
40 (Including those for
Turbine Mexico 2 48
replacement 12)
Taiwan 2
China 2
49
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Nuclear Energy Systems
Others
Nuclear Power Plant Capacity in the World (As of Jan. 1. 2012) (Unit 10MWe, Gross Output)
In Operation Under Construction Planned
Total
Country Region
Output Units Output Units Output Units Output Units
1 U.S.A. 10,632.3 104 120.0 1 1,066.0 9 11,818.3 114
2 France 6,588.0 58 163.0 1 6,751.0 59
3 Japan 4,614.8 50 442.1 4 1,240.7 9 6,297.6 63
4 Russia 2,419.4 28 1,106.6 12 1,396.4 13 4,922.4 53
5 Republic of Korea 1,871.6 21 580.0 5 280.0 2 2,731.6 28
6 Ukraine 1,381.8 15 200.0 2 1,581.8 17
7 Canada 1,330.5 18 1,330.5 18
8 Germany 1,269.6 9 1,269.6 9
9 China 1,194.8 14 3,329.9 30 2,817.5 26 7,342.2 70
10 United Kingdom 1,172.2 18 1,172.2 18
11 Sweden 940.9 10 940.9 10
12 Spain 778.5 8 778.5 8
13 Belgium 619.4 7 619.4 7
14 Taiwan 520.0 6 270.0 2 790.0 8
15 India 478.0 20 530.0 7 530.0 4 1538.0 31
16 Czech Republic 401.6 6 200.0 2 601.6 8
17 Switzerland 340.5 5 340.5 5
18 Finiand* 284.0 4 172.0 1 260.0 2 716.0 7
19 Bulgaria 200.0 2 200.0 2 400.0 4
20 Hungary 200.0 4 200.0 4
21 Brazil 199.2 2 140.5 1 339.7 3
22 Slovak Republic 195.0 4 94.2 2 289.2 6
23 South Africa 191.0 2 191.0 2
24 Romania 141.0 2 211.8 3 352.8 5
25 Mexico 136.4 2 136.4 2
26 Argentina 100.5 2 74.5 1 175.0 3
27 Pakistan 78.7 3 68.0 2 146.7 5
28 Slovenia 74.9 1 74.9 1
29 Netherlands 51.2 1 51.2 1
30 Armenia 40.8 1 40.8 1
31 Iran 100.0 1 38.5 1 138.5 2
32 UAE 560.0 4 560.0 4
33 Turkey 480.0 4 480.0 4
34 Indonesia 400.0 4 400.0 4
35 Vietnam 400.0 4 400.0 4
36 Republic of Belarus 240.0 2 240.0 2
37 Egypt 187.2 2 187.2 2
38 Lithuania 138.4 1 138.4 1
39 Israel 66.4 1 66.4 1
40 Kazakhstan N/A 1 N/A 1
41 Jordan N/A 1 N/A 1
Total 38,446.6 427 7,602.6 75 10,501.1 94 56,550.3 596
(previous year) (39,220.3)
(436)(7,573.4)(75)(9,974.9)(91)
(56,768.6)
(602)
*1 The presently uncertain output of 2 planned units of Finland was temporally calculated.
50
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Nuclear Energy Systems
700
600
Genkai Unit 1, Kyushu Tomari Unit 1, Hokkaido
559 MW 579 MW
500
Mihama Unit 2, Kansai
400 500 MW
Mihama Unit 1, Kansai
340 MW
300
1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
PWR and BWR
There are approximately 400 nuclear power plants currently in service worldwide. Of these
plants, and including plants currently under construction or on the drawing board, 90%* or
more are Light Water Reactors (LWRs), a type that uses normal water for coolant. There are
two basic designs for an LWRs: the PWR (pressurized water reactor) and BWR (boiling water
reactor). About 70% of LWRs are the former type, the PWR. MHI is the only manufacturer of
PWR plants in Japan.
* By generating capacity ratio.
Containment vessel
Nuclear Secondary Steam
Island coolant ctor vess
Conventional ea
Pressurizer
el
R
Island
Secondary Steam
coolant
Control rods Coolant
Turbine Generator
Steam generator
Containment vessel
Fuel
Coolant
Reactor Condenser
Coolant
coolant Control
Water
rods Recirculation
pump
To discharge
Reactor canal
coolant Coolant To discharge
(Seawater) canal
Water
pump
Reactor vessel Circulating water pump Coolant
(Seawater)
Feedwater pump Suppression pool
There are two water flows in PWR: the "reactor coolant," which circulates between the
nuclear reactor and steam generator, and the "secondary coolant," which circulates
between the steam generator and turbine.
Of the 50 nuclear power plants now in service in Japan, 24 units are PWR plants manufactured
by MHI. These PWR plants are operated by the electric power companies of Hokkaido,
Kansai, Shikoku, and Kyushu, as well as The Japan Atomic Power Company. The BWR plants
are operated by the electric power companies of Tohoku, Tokyo, Chubu, Hokuriku, Chugoku.
51
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Outline
The Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems was newly formed within MHI in May
2006 through the integration of two formerly independent headquarters: the Machinery
Headquarters and the Steel Structures & Construction Headquarters. The Environmental &
Chemical Plant Department performs engineering for chemical processing plants across a
wide range of fields, including fertilizers, methanol, oil and gas production, storage facilities,
and oil refineries, as well as flue gas desulfurization plants and flue gas CO2 recovery plants.
In the Environmental Equipment Department, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Environmental &
Chemical Engineering Co., Ltd. has been engaged in waste treatment system since 2008.
The Transportation Systems Department is in charge of urban and airport transportation
systems such as Automated People Mover (APM) System, rail transportation systems
(including MRT and fully automated driverless train systems), light rail transit system (LRT),
mechanical and electrical systems for Shinkansen trains. It also handles transportation-
related equipment such as air brake devices, motors for hybrid cars and electric vehicles,
flue gas laser measurement systems and Intelligent Transport Systems (ETC (Electronic
Toll Collection) System, ERP (Electronic Road Pricing) systems and etc.). The Advanced
Equipment Department develops new businesses in new fields such as beam accelerators,
laser equipment, medical systems and semiconductor equipment.
The Compressor & Turbine Department produces compressors and mechanical drive
steam turbines for the oil & gas, refinery, petrochemical, air separation, and carbon capture
& storage fields. These businesses were taken over by the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Compressor Corporation in 2010.
The Metals Machinery group constructs iron and steel manufacturing plants and related
machinery, continuous casting machines, rolling mill equipment, processing equipment,
and pipe manufacturing equipment. All of these products have significantly contributed to
industrial development domestically and overseas. These businesses were taken over in
2002 by Mitsubishi-Hitachi Metals Machinery, Inc., a joint venture company established with
Hitachi, Ltd.
The newly established Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Parking Co., Ltd. has been running MHI’s
mechanical parking system business since October 2005.
The newly established Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Bridge & Steel Structures Engineering
Co., Ltd. has been running MHI’s bridge business since 2006.
In addition, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Mechatronics Systems Co., Ltd. has been in charge
of water treatment-ralated products, air pollution control systems, and urban development
products since 2009 and testing equipment, culture /sports facilities and steel penstock since
2012, urban development products and all sorts of testing and survey instruments since
2009, while Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Machinery Technology has handled rubber and tire
machines, cranes, carrier systems and similar since 2012.
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Plastic Technology Co., Ltd. and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Food & Packaging Machinery Co., Ltd., wholly owned group companies established by
MHI on April 1, 2005, manufacture a diverse range of machinery including injection molding
machines for manufacturing plastic products, fillers for bottling drinks, and packaging
machinery for food and medicines, and have been members of the Machinery & Steel
Infrastructure Systems since 2010.
52
52
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Printing & Packaging Machinery, Ltd. (MHI-P & PM) was newly
established July 2010. The company manufactures printing and paper converting machinery.
Recently, as part of the company’s efforts for its new business, MHI promotes developing a
smart community where energy, environment and transportation are organically integrated in
the future environmental city. The company engages in demonstration businesses inside and
outside of Japan based on its environment-related products, ITS and technologies used for
its transportation system products.
Main Products
Environmental & Chemical Plants
● Chemical plants: production plants for petrochemicals, fertilizer, methanol, DME
● Oil and gas plants: oil refineries, onshore and offshore plants for oil and gas production,
LNG/LPG production and receiving terminals
● Flue gas desulfurization plants for power generation and process industries
● Flue gas CO2 recovery plants: plants for chemical industries, CO2 enhanced oil recovery
(CO2 EOR) and Global Warming mitigation (CO2 Geological Sequestration)
Environment
● Waste treatment systems for the following applications: municipal waste incineration (small-
to-medium and large incinerators (stoker systems, gasification and ash melting systems,
etc.)); flue gas treatment; waste water treatment; ash vitrification; thermal recovery for
power generation, swimming pool heating, gardening, social welfare institutions with public
baths, etc.; municipal waste classification plants; bulky waste treatment plants; recycling
center facilities for steel, aluminum, and paper; various types of industrial waste incineration
that incorporate torrefaction, carbonization, melting, and other technologies; sewage
sludge treatment devices; and facilities that use biomass.(Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Environmental & Chemical Engineering Co., Ltd.)
53
53
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
● ITS: ETC (electronic toll collection) systems, ERP (electronic road pricing) systems, DSRC
(dedicated short range communication) equipment
Metals Machinery
● Iron and steel manufacturing plants and machinery: iron-making and steelmaking
equipment, rolling mill equipment, processing equipment, pipe-manufacturing equipment
(Mitsubishi-Hitachi Metals Machinery, Inc.), continuous casting machines (MHI Steel
Machinery Engineering & Service Co., Ltd.)
General Machineries
● Rubber and tire machinery: engineering and manufacture of various plant equipment and
automated systems for tire manufacture, such as mixers, bias cutters, building machines,
curing presses, and tire testing machine; mixers for industrial rubber goods
● Crane and material-handling systems: various cranes for iron and steel manufacturing
plants, container handling quayside cranes, rubber-tyred/rail-mounted gantry cranes,
various overhead traveling cranes for industrial plants, integrated automated storage
systems
(Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Machinery Technology Corporation)
Steel Structures
● Steel bridges and stacks: all types of steel roadway bridges, railway bridges, Vibration
and Isolation Systems, road-maintenance equipment, gate, gas holder, and stacks. (The
recently established Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Bridge & Steel Structures Engineering Co.,
Ltd. took over the bridge business in 2006.)
54
54
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Industrial Machinery
● Injection Molding Machine: super-large sized electric injection molding machine, large
sized electric injection molding machine, medium sized electric injection molding machine,
large sized electrically driven, rotary platen, co-injection molding machine, large sized and
super-large sized hydraulic injection molding machine (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Plastic
Technology Co., Ltd.)
● Food and Packaging Machinery: bottling and canning machinery, other machinery for food
including beverage related products, and pharmaceuticals, packaging machinery, aseptic
filling machinery, other food processing related machinery (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Food & Packaging Machinery Co., Ltd.)
Mechatronics Systems
● Testing Equipment, Penstock, Cultural/Sports Facilities, System Control Technologies, etc.
(Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Mechatronics Systems, Ltd.)
55
55
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Production History
Environment
Date Product
1964 Delivered the first Mitsubishi traveling stoker-type refuse incinerator, to
Sagamihara City, Japan (total capacity: 180T/D).
1974 Delivered the first Mitsubishi-Martin refuse incinerator, to Kawasaki City, Japan
(total capacity: 600T/D with 2,000kW turbine generator).
2000 Delivered the world’s class largest waste-to-energy plant to the Ministry of the
Environment, Singapore (total capacity: 4,320T/D, with a 132,600kW turbine generator).
2003 Awarded the largest domestic class of PCB waste treatment plant, from Japan
Environmental Safety Corporation, Japan (PCB treatment capacity: 2T/D).
2004 Awarded the largest domestic class of food waste fermentation and power-
generating plant, from BIOENERGY Corporation, Japan (total capacity: 110T/D
with 1,000kW power generator).
2006 Delivered the first unit of fluidized-bed type gasification and ash melting plant to the
Kushiro Wide-Area Federation. (total capacity: 240T/D)
56
56
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
■Environment
Date Product
2007 Delivered the first sewage sludge carbonization facility in to Bio Fuel Co., Inc. (total
capacity: 100T/D3 unites in Tokyo East Sludge Disposal Plant)
2011 Received an order for the largest class of garbage incineration facility in China
(3,000 T/D, for Beijing)
57
57
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
58
58
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
■Metals Machinery
Date Product
2007 Delivered the No. 3 hot strip mill to Baosteel Group Corp., China
2010 Delivered hot strip mill to JSW Steel Ltd., India.
Delivered hot strip mill to Hyundai Steel Company, Korea.
Delivered hot strip mill to Dragon Steel Corporation, Taiwan
2011 Delivered a continuous pickling and tandem cold mill for Guangzhou JFE Steel
Sheet Company Ltd. in China
Delivered a continuous pickling and tandem cold mill to Severstal North America, Inc, U. S. A
2012 Delivered a hot rolling facility to Usiminas Co., Brazil
■General Machineries
Date Product
1982 Completed one of the world’s largest ladle cranes (520T).
2000 Completed the world’s first container-handling crane with a seismic isolation system
(at Tokyo Port, Ohi Wharf).
2002 Delivered MHI’s 4,000th set of tire-curing presses.
2005 Completed the world’s first automatic rubber-tyred gantry cranes, for Tobishima
Container Berth Co., Ltd. (at Nagoya Port)
2007 Delivered MHI’s 5,000th set of tire-curing presses.
2009 MHI to manufacture rubber tire machinery in China— production to begin in March.
■Steel Structures
Date Product
1868 Completed Japan’s first steel bridge (the Kurogane-bashi).
1961 Delivered the first Mitsubishi Tower Parking, a vertical circulation-type mechanical
Parking system
1988 Completed the Second Bosphorus Bridge (Turkey).
1989 Delivered the largest (at this point in time) cable-stayed bridge in Japan (the Yokohama
Bay Bridge)
1991 Completed 125,000kl in-ground LNG tank, to Tokyo Electric Power Company.
1998 Completed the world’s largest suspension bridge (the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge).
1999 Delivered the world’s largest (at this point in time) cable-stayed bridge (the Tatara
Bridge)
2001 Completed an ultrahigh stack (230m).
Completed Japan’s largest LNG in-ground storage tank (200,000kl).
2009 Developed multilevel car parking tower with charging function for electric vehicles
(EVs) .
2010 Delivered Japan’s first runway of hybrid structure using landfill and pier (Runway
D) for Tokyo International Airport (Haneda Airport)
59
59
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Industrial Machinery
Injection Molding Machine
Date Product
1962 Started manufacturing Natoco injection molding machines.
1981 Launched MF-series injection molding machines.
1997 Developed small sized injection molding machine.
1999 Developed 3 types of middle-sized electric injection molding machines (ME series).
2000 Collaborated with Fanuc Corporation for sales of electric injection molding
machines.
2001 Developed large-sized electric injection molding machines (em series).
2003 Developed middle-sized electric injection molding machines (ME II series).
Developed high quality molding system, “Active temperature regulating system.”
2004 Developed the industry’s first super large-sized electric injection molding machines
(3500em).
2006 Developed the industry’s first mold platen rotary type bi-material electronic injection
molding machines (3000emR).
Won the Machine Design Award for the super large-sized electric injection molding
machine 3000em.
2008 Developed large-sized injection molding machines (em II series).
2011 Developed the em P series of electrically driven injection molding machines for
large and thin light-guiding plates
2012 Developed the MMX series of large hydraulic injection molding machines
60
60
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Mechatronics Systems
Date Product
1962 Completed Japan’s first steel pipes made of high-tensile-strength steels, for Tokyo
Electric Power Company.
1988 Completed a φ8,620mm EPB shield for the Channel Tunnel (T5).
1989 Completed Japan’s largest movable seating system (11,000 seats) (Yokohama Arena).
1992 Completed Japan’s first high-tech stage machinery system for a European-style
theater (Aichi Prefectural Theater of Arts).
1996 Delivered the large-scale low noise (world’s quietest) wind tunnel, for Railway
Technical Research Institute.
1997 Delivered a stage machinery system to New National Theatre, Opera House.
2000 Delivered a retractable seat system and a variable ceiling wall (moving block) to
Saitama Super Arena.
Completed the Saitama Super Arena, a facility with a movable-seating floor
system.
2006 Delivered a full-scale acoustic wind tunnel, for SUZUKI Motor Corporation.
2008 Delivered Ferris wheel (Singapore Flyer) in Marina Bay, Singapore.
61
61
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Date Product
2008 DIAMOND V3000 sheet-fed offset press wins Japan’s “Good Design Gold Award
2008.”
DIAMOND V3000 sheet-fed offset press wins 38th Industrial Machinery Design
Award presented by The Business & Technology Daily News.
Launched the DIAMOND 16MAX+ series commercial web offset press.
2009 MHI markers LED-UV dryig system for larger format sheet-fed offset presses,
realizig 70-80% reduction in electricig consumper.
2010 MHI establishes new company dedicated to printing & paper converting machinery
business.
62
62
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Outline
The Transportation Systems & Advanced Technology Division was formed in October 2009
by combining the Machinery and Steel Structure Division of Kobe Shipyard & Machinery
Works and the Plant and Transportation Systems Engineering & Construction Center located
at Mihara Machinery Works. The Machinery and Steel Structure Division of Kobe Shipyard &
Machinery Works was founded in 1905 and has been at the forefront of advanced technology
engineering ever since. The Plant and Transportation Systems Engineering and Construction
Division was founded in 1943 as a workshop for steam locomotives and air brake systems.
In 2012, the Transportation Systems & Advanced Technology Division was split into the
Transportation Operations Division and the Advanced Mechanical Systems Department.
The transportation Operations Division supply several types of advanced technology
transportation systems, including automated people movers (APM), intelligence transport
systems (ITS) and others.
The divisions are industry leaders for technical innovation and have extensive international
and domestic project experience. They continue to make major contributions to industrial
development and the construction of social and industrial infrastructure, particularly in the
field power train systems.
As part of the company’s efforts for its new business, MHI promotes developing a smart
community where energy, environment and transportation are organically integrated in the
future environmental city, and furthermore, the company engages in experimental proof
businesses in and outside Japan based on transportation and ITS technologies.
63
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
50
43.0
40 17
89 88 88
30 84
88
20 83
10
(Transportation Systems & Advanced
0
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Technology Division) 2009-
Transportation systems equipment Toll-collection machinery
Note: ※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit Air brakes & marine engine control ■ Mechatronics system equipment
※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total
annual production. (unit: billion yen) (bil.yen)
※3. Figures until FY2002, due to integration with Kobe 150
(KOBE) 2003-2008
Toll-collection machinery Steel structure ■ Advanced control facility 106.7
Reconstruction & renewal of cultural & urban facility ■
100 9
Environmental equipment ■ Others
11
(bil.yen) 74.8
70 13
64.7 24
11
60.7 56.2
10
60 57.3 26 19
2 50
14 20 13
13
50 46.5 56
9 8 1 43.4 39
21
8 1 50
40 14 11 36.6 29
29 30 1
0
30 17 28 2009 2010 2011
20 2 45 19
3
6
※Transportation Systems & Advanced Technology
4
20 Division was established in October 2009, through
6
the integration of Mihara and Kobe
46 65
35 50
10 33
In April 2012, the Transportation Systems & Advanced
29
Technology Division was divided into the Transportation
0 Operations Division and the Advanced Mechanical
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Systems Department.
Note: ※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit Note: ※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit
※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total ※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total
annual production. (unit: billion yen) annual production. (unit: billion yen)
※3. Figures until FY2008, due to integration with Mihara
64
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Aerospace Systems
5. Aerospace Systems
Outline
In addition to developing and producing fighters, helicopters, and guided weapon systems,
the Aerospace Systems and other MHI divisions involved in defense propose integrated
defense systems based on the newest information technologies.
Not long after developing and producing Japan’s first supersonic jet trainer, the T-2, MHI
developed the F-1 supersonic jet support fighter using the Technologies from the T-2. This
was followed in 1978 by the development of the control-configured vehicle (CCV)
experimental aircraft, with unprecedented maneuverability. The company has been
collaborating with Lockheed Martin Corporation to produce the F-2 jet fighter, an aircraft
based on the U.S. F-16, and delivered the last aircraft in September, 2011.
MHI is also a prolific manufacturer of defense helicopters. For example, the company
completed the final delivery of the SH-60J, a domestically produced anti-submarine
helicopter based on Sikorsky’s SH-60B, in March 2005. Earlier, in the summer of 2005, the
company completed development and began delivery of the SH-60K, a new-generation patrol
helicopter based on the SH-60J. The UH-60J, a helicopter for rescue/utility operations, is also
manufactured and fully supported after sale. MHI divisions involved in guided weapon
systems manufacture the Patriot surface-to-air missile, air-to-air missiles, anti-ship missiles,
surface-to-ship missiles, and several kinds of torpedoes and ship-borne weapons.
In commercial aircraft products, MHI has formed a cooperative relationship with Boeing and
manufactures fuselage panels for the Boeing 767/777 and wings for the Boeing 787 transport
aircraft. The main structure of the wings of the Boeing 787, a next-generation mid-sized
passenger aircraft which is the first of any mid- or large-sized passenger aircraft in the world
to utilize composite material, produces a new era in flight travel. The company also
manufactures the wings for the Bombardier Global Express business jet and Challenger 300
business jet. In aero engines, MHI participates in the production of PW4000, V2500 and
TRENT1000 turbofan engines, as well as the co-development of the TRENT XWB turbofan
engines for the Airbus A350. In the field of commercial helicopters, MHI produces the cabin of
the Sikorsky S-92.
MHI has been playing a leading role in space systems development such as Japan’s space
transportation projects in coordinated with JAXA (the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency).
H-ⅡA rocket has recorded eight consecutive successes from flight No.13 to No.20, since
MHI had started H-ⅡA launch services in 2006. In July 2012, H-ⅡB rocket No.3 carrying the
H-Ⅱ Transfer Vehicle (HTV) No.3 called “KOUNOTORI” was launched, and HTV was
successfully docked with the International Space Station (ISS). MHI is a prime contractor of
manufacturing both the H-ⅡB and the HTV. In addition, it was announced that the Launch
services of H-ⅡB will be started from the flight No.4 by MHI.
65
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Aerospace Systems
Main Products
u Aircraft: Jet fighters, trainers, helicopters, transport planes, and wings, doors, and fuselage
panels for commercial aircraft
u Aero engines: Turbofan engines, turboshaft engines
u Guided weapon systems: Missiles, torpedoes, mine hunters
u Space equipment: Space transportation vehicles such as H-ⅡA, H-ⅡB, HTV, rocket
engines, ground support facilities
u Industrial equipment: Engine test cells, civil helicopter simulators
Production History
Aircraft
1) ∼ 1945 (during World War Ⅱ )
Type 1 attack-bomber Intercepter fighter “RAIDEN”
Type Zero carrier fighter Type 100 command reconnaissance plane
66
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Aerospace Systems
Aero Engines
1945 ∼ (after World War Ⅱ )
3) Ground facilities
67
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Aerospace Systems
68
ⅩⅠ. Business Segments & Divisions
Aerospace Systems
Outline
World major rockets which have the launch capability of 2 to 6 tons to Geostationary Orbit
60m
40m
H-㈼B
20m
**"
69
H -ⅡA
Name ALIANE Ⅴ DELTA Ⅳ ATLAS Ⅴ PROTON K H -ⅡB CZ-3 (3A)
(Standard Type)
Construction, shipbuilding
transport, information
systems, management
Systems engineering
Quality control, reliability
control, and standardization
of various industries
Lightweight monocoque
structures for vehicles
and rolling stock
Structures
Fail-safe structures for
vehicles, steel structures, Effective use of
and facilities resources
70
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
General Machinery & Special Vehicles
Outline
The General Machinery & Special Vehicle handles the trading of a wide range of products
provided by MHI to support daily life and societies around the world: turbochargers, engines,
forklifts, and special vehicles.
The Business Segments supplies turbochargers for a wide variety of vehicles from
automobiles to marine use with output range of 20 to 2,000kW, to improve the combustion
efficiency of engines and cope with environmental regulations. Turbocharger manufacturing
plants and sales bases located in Japan, the U.S.A., Europe, Thailand, China and other
countries are operating worldwide.
The Business Segments handles gas engines (243~5,750kW) and diesel engines
(3.4~15,400kW) used in a variety of fields including agricultural machinery, generators,
pumps, and ships (but excluding automobiles), and gasoline engines (0.7~9.6kW) used in
agricultural machinery, sprayers, mowing machines, and similar equipment. It conducts both
"unit sales", in which the product is supplied to a final manufacturer, and "set product sales",
in which the engine is delivered directly to the customer as a final product.
The Business Segments trades in forklift trucks (1~42ton), the core of its industrial vehicles
and its main business. Four forklift manufacturing plants in Japan, the U.S.A., Europe and
China, are operating worldwide.
The main special vehicles traded at the Business Segments are tanks, self-propelled
howitzers, and fleet engines. In addition, the division also handles automatic guided vehicles
(AGV) as heavy goods vehicles and motor graders as transferring and leveling machines.
71
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
General Machinery & Special Vehicles
Main Products
Turbochargers
Output range of Mitsubishi Turbocharger
Passenger vehicles
(diesel and gasoline)
Engine
1. Engines
Application Type Output (kW) Product name
For agricultural use Air-cooled MEIKI gasoline
gasoline 0.7 ∼ 9.6 engine
(agricultural machinery/
small-sized industrial Water-cooled MITSUBISHI
diesel 3.4 ∼ 28 diesel engine
machinery)
For industrial use Water-cooled MITSUBISHI
diesel 3.4 ∼ 15,400 diesel engine
(construction machinery/
generators/industrial Water-cooled MITSUBISHI
gas 243 ∼ 5,750 gas engine
drive units)
72
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
General Machinery & Special Vehicles
MEIKI Engine
Powertrain
Hybrid drive systems, inverters/controllers, transmission, drive axles,
lithium-ion secondary battery packs
Special Vehicles
Tanks, fleet engines
73
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
General Machinery & Special Vehicles
Production History
Turbocharger
Date Product
1956 Began production of turbocharger.
Engine
Date Product
1931 Began production of industrial engines.
1946 Began production of agricultural engines.
1947 Began production of marine engines.
1956 Began production of engine generators.
1995 Began production of gas engine generators.
Special Vehicles
1) ∼ 1945 (during World War Ⅱ )
Type 95 light tanks Type 97 medium tanks
74
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
General Machinery & Special Vehicles
Date Product
1920 Established as an automobile maintenance factory in Shibaura, Tokyo. Lines were
added for the manufacture of diesel engines, construction machinery, and special
vehicles in ensuing years.
1970 The Automobile Division split from Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. The production
facilities for construction machinery moved to their current location, in Sagamihara.
2000 The General Machinery & Special Vehicle Headquarters was established as an
integrated organization with sales and manufacturing divisions (from April 1).
Production Distribution
Special Vehicles and Naval-Use Engine Construction machinery / Leisure equipment■
Forklift trucks / Distribution equipment Diesel engines / Generator sets / Cogeneration systems ■
Turbochargers Light-weight gasoline engines■ Small-sized gas turbines■
Construction Machinery and Concrete Placing Equipment■
274.1
3
(bil.yen) 253.7 5
250 3
1 238.4
230.5 5 3
4 19 5 222.1
209.1 5 1 17 202.9
3
4
5
200 5 1 17 20 5
2
173.0 19
156.5 6
1
15 159.9 20
8 35 3
150 7 33 6
1
7 16 34 36 20
16 32 42
38
100 32
29 37
27 26
23 25 25 18
50 24 23 19
18
19 14 14 12 14
16 14 11 16 16
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note: ※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit
※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total annual
production. (unit: billion yen)
75
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems
Outline
As a comprehensive manufacturer of air-conditioners and refrigeration units, the Air-
Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems manufactures a wide ranging product series, from the
residential-use air-conditioners to commercial-use air-conditioners, automotive thermal
systems, applied refrigeration use machines, transport refrigeration units, and centrifugal
chillers. The integrated organization of the Business Segment facilitates the development,
manufacture, and marketing of a wide range of high-quality products, including many
industry-first and top-of-the-line product series.
Some of the latest examples of the highly energy-efficient products being developed and sold
include the ETW, an industry-first heat recovery type centrifugal heat pump; Q-ton, a CO2
refrigerant heat pump water heater for commercial use which can be used at the minimum
external temperature of -25ºC; TU100SA, a sub-engine type refrigerating unit for trucks that
has achieved high energy-saving features, small size, light weight and low-noise; and
Compressors for automotive thermal systems, which achieved small size, light weight and
high efficiency and suitable for use in compact vehicles and hybrid / electrical vehicles.
Overseas bases have been established subsequently in Thailand, China, the U.S.A.,
Australia, and so on, in preparation for expected expansions in global market. These
overseas bases coordinate organically with each other to improve efficiency in global
operations of the Business Segment.
Main Products
uCommercial use air-conditioners: packaged air-conditioners for shops, multi-type air-
conditioners for buildings, packaged air-conditioners for facilities, chilling units, gas heat
pump air-conditioners, cooling tower, commercial use cooling and heater, air to water heat
pump system
uResidential use air-conditioners: room air-conditioners, housing air-conditioners,
humidifiers, air purification system
uAutomotive thermal systems: automotive thermal systems, truck air-conditioners
uApplied refrigeration use machines: semi-hermetic type condensing units, hermetic
condensing units, storage refrigeration units
uTransport refrigeration units: truck and trailer refrigeration units, bus air-conditioners
uCentrifugal chiller: centrifugal chiller, Heat Recovery Type water to water Heat Pump, heat source
system
76
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems
Production History
Date Product
1915 Began sales of marine carbonic acid gas refrigerators.
1946 Began sales of small-sized open-type condensing units.
1952 Began sales of multi-cylinder refrigerators.
1953 Began sales of packaged-type air-conditioners.
1956 Began sales of air-conditioners for residential use.
1957 Began sales of automotive thermal systems.
1961 Began sales of air-cooled heat pump package-type air-conditioners.
1967 Began sales of marine transport refrigeration units.
1970 Began operation of district heating and air-conditioning system in Senri New Town.
1971 Began sales of split-type room air-conditioners.
1978 Began sales of wall-mount type commercial use air-conditioners.
1980 Began sales of ceiling recessed commercial use air-conditioners.
1981 Began sales of pressure cooling units.
1982 Began export of automobile air-conditioners to the U.S.A.
1984 Began sales of ceiling-suspension, wall-mounted, floor-standing conversional air-
conditioners.
1986 Began sales of a high-temperature heat-pump system for industrial use.
1987 Began sales of a very-high-air-temperature outlet, fast pull-down residential heat
pump and a low-air-temperature outlet, fast pull-down residential air-conditioner.
Began sales of a heat pump high-temperature self-cleaning anti microbe soft ice
cream freezer.
1988 Began sales of ceiling fan type indoor unit.
1989 Began sales of a fuzzy control high-temperature-air outlet heat pump.
Began operation of a district heating and air-conditioning system designed to use
waste heat from the subway in Sapporo.
1990 Began sales of zone air-conditioners for outdoor use.
Began sales of PSA-feron recovery equipment.
1991 Began sales of underfloor-type air-conditioning systems.
Developed an ethylene removal system.
1992 Began sales of land-use container freezing units (achieved -30˚C) using CFC22.
1993 Began sales of a residential use air-conditioners with a highly efficient new-type DD
scroll compressor.
1994 Began sales of space-saving air-conditioners for commercial use incorporating
horizontal scroll compressors.
Began sales of ice-storage-type commercial use air-conditioners.
77
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems
Date Product
1995 Began sales of roof air-conditioners to be installed in the roofs of camping cars.
Began sales of refrigerant-heating-type commercial use air-conditioners.
1996 Began sales of small-size split-type refrigerating and freezing units designed for use
with the new cooling agent R404.
1997 Began sales of the triple DD scroll compressor air-conditioner designed for use with
the new cooling agent R410A.
1998 Began sales of high efficiency and high-grade residential use air-conditioners (the
RZ series).
1999 Began sales of high-efficiency residential use air-conditioners with a new ventilation
mechanism (the BLSV series).
Began sales of high-efficiency inverter-type commercial use air-conditioners (the
HiCoP25 series).
2000 Began sales of an air-conditioner for residential use which can be operated via the
internet (the e-@ir).
Began sales of multi-type ice storage air-conditioners for buildings (the High Peak
Shift & Cut series).
2001 Began sales of speedy heating/cooling and low-noise air-conditioners based on jet
engine technology (the SD series).
Began sales of the world’s highest-efficiency centrifugal chiller designed for use with
R134a (the NART series).
2002 Began sales of inverter-type commercial use air-conditioners (the Hyper-Inverter
series).
2003 Began sales of variable speed driven centrifugal chillers with the world’s highest
partial load efficiency (the NART-Ⅰseries).
2004 Began sales of an inverter-type variable flow air-conditioners for buildings (the
Hyper Multi LX series).
2005 Began sales of high-efficiency gas heat pump air-conditioners (GHPs) (the ECO7
series).
2006 Began sales of TFV2000D, the country’s first freezing unit for trailers.
2007 Began sales of the New SJ series, and the New ZJ series residential air-conditioners.
2008 Began sales of variable speed driven centrifugal chillers (the ETI series).
2009 Began sales of the heat recovery type centrifugal heat pump (the ETW).
2010 Began sales of the RSM series and the RM series residential air-conditioners with
automatic filter cleaning function.
2011 Heat pump hot water supply system “Q-ton” announced
78
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems
79
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems
Others
Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Products
Total Demand (2002.4 ∼ 2011.3)
Commercial-use air-conditioner Residential-use air-conditioner ■ Automobile & bus air-
conditioner Centrifugal, absorption chiller ■ Refrigeration unit ■ Cold Storage & refrigeration
equipment ■
(bil.yen)
3000 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.6 1.5 1.7 1.3 1.3
1.4
2308.7 2309.3
2200.0 2227.2
2116.6 2121.7 10.7 9.8 2120.7 2109.7
12.1 11.9 9.8 1909.8 8.7 1893.9
2000 11.5 11.8 6.2 6.4
6.1
6.9 7.4 7.5 6.1 9.8 5.9 10.6
6.5 4.1
34.0
31.8 32.7 29.5 28.3
33.1 32.9 31.8 30.7
30.7
80
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machine Tool
8. Machine Tool
Outline
The Machine Tool manufactures various machine tools, precision cutting tools, engine valves
and transmission devices at its main plant at Ritto in Shiga Prefecture and the Iwatsuka plant
in Nagoya.
In addition to its accumulated technologies as a pioneer in the Japanese Machine Tool
Industry, the Business Segment has the production technique which has been growing as an
equipment supplying division to support its world top level energy and infrastructure related
products, and it is highly praised in and outside of Japan. The division focuses not only
performance of machine, but also development of global and work environmental-friendly
machine tools.
In 2002, it successfully developed the precision cutting tools “Super Dry Hob,” the world’s first
cutting tool for the complete dry cutting system (gear processing method requiring no cutting
oil). The Business Segment is a total manufacturer of gear cutting tools, renowned worldwide
for its versatile skills in the production of both precision cutting tools and gear cutting
machines, and markets high valued products.
The Business Segment began by producing engine valves for aircrafts during the World War
II, and now it produces valves mainly for automobiles. In 2010, it succeeded in the
development and practical implementation of a mass-production process in which hollow-
head engine valves are forged using only a forging press. This contributes to making engines
lighter and enhances combustion.
The power transmissions of MHI have achieved stable power transmission and accuracy due
to its unique technologies of Niemann tooth and planetary traction drive, and they are
adopted to various kinds of industrial machines requiring high efficiency.
Main Products
uMachine tools: gear cutting machine, large machine (horizontal boring mill, vertical
precision milling machine), special-purpose machine, machining center, cylindrical
grinding machine
uPrecision machinery products: precision cutting tools, engine valves, transmission
devices, precision position feedback sensor
uOthers: wafer Bonder
81
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machine Tool
Production History
Date Product
1939 Began production of lathes.
1944 Began production of aircraft engine valves.
1953 Developed Japan’s first transfer line for mass-production.
1960 Began production of the Mitsubishi-Innocenti CWB milling-and-boring combined
machine.
1961 Began production of the Mitsubishi-Lorenz hobbing machine.
1963 Began production of worm gear units.
1966 Began production of the Mitsubishi-Reihauer shaving cutter grinder.
1967 Developed Japan’s first NC horizontal boring mill. Began sales of the MAF machine.
1968 Developed the Mitsubishi horizontal machining center “MPA Series.”
1978 Began production of the Mitsubishi-Warner Swasey cylindrical grinding machine.
1980 Developed Japan’s first NC gear hobbing machine.
Began sales of the GH400NC.
Developed the Mitsubishi Planetary traction drive units.
1983 Developed Japan’s first NC cylindrical grinding machine “A6G/P6G.”
1985 Began sales of a vertical precision milling machine “M-VR series.”
Completed the world’s largest-class NC milling-and-boring combined machine
1986
“Supermiller.”
1987 Developed a high-speed, high-precision die and mold machine “M-KR series.”
Developed a dry cutting system. Began sales of SuperDry hobbing machines “GN
1997
series and SuperDry hob.”
2003 Began sales of the new vertical precision milling machine “MVR series.”
2004 Began sales of E series machines for gear manufacture: SuperDry hobbing
machine “GE series,” SuperDry gear shaping machine “SE25A,” gear shaving
machine “FE30A,” and gear grinding machine “ZE series.”
Began sales of large-size die and mold machine “MVR-FM series.”
2005 Developed the world’s first wafer bonding machine operable at room temperature
for MEMS.
2006 Began sales of the micro milling machine “µV1.”
2008 Began sales of the new horizontal boring mill “MAF150R.”
Began sales of the world’s first mass production type internally toothed ring gear
2009
grinding machine “ZI20A.”
2010 Developed Japan’s first large-size gear grinding machine “ZGA2000.”
Succeeded in mass-production of hollow-head engine valves for automobiles using
the forge-press hollowing process
82
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machine Tool
Date Product
2011 Began sales of large gear shaper “SEA 1600.”
Developed world’s first room temperature wafer bonding machine for 300mm three-
dimensionally integrated LSI circuits
Began sales of the new horizontal boring mill “MAF150C.”
2012 Began sales of the high precision double column machining center “LH250.”
Ritto
Date Product
1944 The former Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. commenced production of aircraft engine
valves at Kyoto Machinery Works (Uzumasa, Kyoto-city).
Production of aircraft engines commenced at Kyoto Engine Works (Katsura, Kyoto-city).
1970 Automobile Division separated from the Kyoto Machinery Works. Plant renamed to
Kyoto Machinery Works of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.
1983 Ritto Plant was constructed in Ritto, Shiga Prefecture, Japan.
1986 Universal machine manufacturing plant was constructed (current No. 1 Machine Tool Plant) in Ritto Plant.
Afrer integration
Date Product
2000 Kyoto Machinery Works and Hiroshima Machine Tool Works of Mitsubishi Heavy
Industries, Ltd. integrated and renamed Machine Tool Works (January).
Machine Tool Division established in order to integrate production and sales operations (April).
2003 No. 2 Machine Tool Plant constructed. Hiroshima Plant moved and integrated into the
Ritto Plant.
2004 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Machine Tool Sales Co., Ltd. established as a dedicated
machine tool sales subsidiary in Japan (April).
MHI Machine Tools H.K., Ltd. established as a dedicated machine tool sales/service
subsidiary in Hong Kong (December).
83
Ⅶ. Business Segments & Divisions
Machine Tool
Date Product
2005 Integrated production of power transmissions (Iwatsuka Plant, Nagoya-city) with the
Machine Tool Division (April).
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. acquired Indian tool company S.R.P. Tools Limited.
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries India Precision Tools, Ltd. established (May).
2011 Started production of gear machine tools at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Changshu)
Machinery Co., Ltd. in China. (March)
Reorganized as Machine Tool Division due to entire company’s restructuring
2012 Acquired Federal Broach Holdings, LLC, an American broach and broach machine
manufacturer
Area (m2)
Site Building
84
Ⅷ. Works
85
Ⅷ. Works
Nagasaki Shipyard & Machinery Works
Outline
The Nagasaki Shipyard & Machinery Works was established in 1857 as “Nagasaki
Yotetsusho,” the first warship repair facility in Japan. Since then, with shipbuilding and
machinery manufacturing as its two core businesses, we have played a key role as an
industry leader, in terms of both quality and quantity. The Works presently consists of four
plants: the Main plant, the Koyagi Plant, the Saiwaimachi Plant, and the Isahaya Plant.
The shipbuilding division excels in the building of ships with high added-value, such as LNG
ships, LPG ships, and cruise ships. The machinery division contributes to the development of
society as a producer of thermal, geothermal, and wind power plants, as well as solar cells,
pollution control equipment, desalination plants, and marine machinery. The Works also
participates in the production of space equipment based on long years of accumulated
experience and technology, and develops new fields and products, including its fuel-cells,
and integrated coal gasification combined-cycle power plants.
The Aerospace Systems Division also participates in the production of defense and space
equipment based on long years of accumulated experience and technologies.
Area (As of April 1, 2012)
Area (m2)
Site Building
Main Plant 586,584 334,167
Koyagi Plant 1,606,065 444,704
Saiwaimachi Plant 68,298 72,688
Isahaya Plant 135,961 57,259
Total 2,396,908 908,818
Nagasaki R&D Center 201,906 74,192
86
Ⅷ. Works
Kobe Shipyard & Machinery Works
Outline
Kobe Shipyard & Machinery Works started operation in 1905 mainly as a facility for repairing
ships.
Today it comprises the Main Plant and the Futami Plant. The Shipbuilding & Ocean
Development Division builds submarines and marine development equipment. The Power
Systems and the Nuclear Energy Systems Division, meanwhile, manufactures things such as
nuclear power plants and marine diesel engines, contributing to industrial development and
building of a solid social infrastructure. Also, the Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
Division manufactures a variety of products for terrestrial applications, including urban transit
systems and toll collection equipment, as well as HEV / EV motor system. Consolidating our
abundant experience and excellent technology, we are actively taking the challenge of
pioneering new products and fields such as semiconductor manufacturing devices and space
equipment.
100
9 10 8
22 22 23 20 23 17 18 16 18 18
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note:※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit
※2. Figure on the column show the amount of total annual
production (billions of yen)
87
Ⅷ. Works
Shimonoseki Shipyard & Machinery Works
Outline
This Works was established in 1914 as a facility for ship repair. Today it consists of two
plants, the Enoura Plant and Yamatomachi Plant. The shipbuilding department specializes
and excels in building special-purpose vessels such as cable layers, ocean research vessels,
large ferries, high-speed RO/RO boats, all types of light-alloy high-speed ships, and other
value-added vessels. The power systems department produces a wide range of products
such as deck machinery, air preheaters, testing systems, and hydraulic machinery. The
aerospace systems department makes composits parts for aircraft and space equipment.
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note:※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit
※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total annual
production. (unit: billion yen)
88
Ⅷ. Works
Yokohama Dockyard & Machinery Works
89
Ⅷ. Works
Takasago Machinery Works
Outline
In 1962 the Works began operating as a turbine manufacturing plant within the Kobe
Shipyard & Machinery Works, a producer of large-capacity power plants and machinery. In
1964 the plant separated from the Kobe Works and established as the Takasago Machinery
Works. Today it manufactures products such as gas, steam, and water turbines, pumps and
refrigeration systems. The high-performance gas turbines produced at the Works, the most
heat-efficient ever realized, contribute to the advancement of both daily life and industry all
over the world.
Area (As of April 1, 2012)
Area (m2)
Site Building
Main Plant 873,841 299,560
Iwanai Plant 7,120 2,220
Total 880,961 301,516
Takasago R&D Center 143,148 61,039
(bil.yen) 413.1
power plants .......2,400,000 kW 4
404.9
400 374.3 4
389.3 6
Water turbines............750,000 kW 359.1 4 4 366.7 3
4 2 3 3 4
Pumps...............................500 units 5 4 4 3 1
4 3
1
1 4
2 1
1
Refrigeration systems 300
(Centrifugal chillers) ...400,000 refrigerating tons 260.9
242.9 4 1
4
7 224.4 60
6 7 55 58 64 61 64
200 7
1
4
167.0 11 1
10 60
6
10 1
58
55
100
47
33 30 26
31 24 27 22
21 26 22
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note:※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit
※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total annual
production. (unit: billion yen)
90
Ⅷ. Works
Nagoya Aerospace Systems Works
Outline
This Works was established in 1920 as a subsection of Mitsubishi Internal Combustion
Engine Manufacturing Co., Ltd. In 1956, the aircraft division split from the Nagoya Machinery
Works and named itself the Nagoya Aircraft Works. Then, in 1989, the Nagoya Aircraft Works
split into two entities, the Nagoya Aerospace Systems Works and the Nagoya Guidance &
Propulsion Systems Works. The Nagoya Aerospace Systems Works comprises the Oye
Plant, Tobishima Plant, Komaki South Plant and so on. In addition to designing and
manufacturing products for advanced aircraft and product-support services, the Works
designs and manufactures the latest space equipments and provides launch services. To
meet the growing demands of MHI commercial airplane business, the Works commissioned a
new composite wing center at the Oye Plant in 2006. MHI officially launched the Mitsubishi
Regional Jet (MRJ), a next-generation regional jetliner in 2008 and established Mitsubishi
Aircraft Corporation. MHI will manufacture prototype aircrafts and production models and be
in charge of the MRJ’s flight testing.
Outline
This Works began operation in 1972 as the Komaki North Plant within the Nagoya Aircraft
Works. Seventeen years later, in 1989, it became independent and named itself the Nagoya
Guidance & Propulsion Systems Works. The Works now manufactures missiles, aerospace
engines, space systems, and control equipment.
15 129.7 14 33 30
Hybrid IC for heavy environment 16
15
37
100 36 34
37
36
64
64 67
60 63
50
49 51
49 50 49
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note:※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit
※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total annual
production. (unit: billion yen)
92
Ⅷ. Works
Hiroshima Machinery Works
Outline
This Works commenced operation in 1944. When the marine division was made separate in
1986, the Works was renamed from the Hiroshima Shipyard & Engine Works to the Hiroshima
Machinery Works. Divisional organization was introduced in 2009, and the “Industrial
Machinery Business, Technology & Solutions Division” was inaugurated. In 2011, Hiroshima
Machinery Works was established as an organization geared especially for corporate
functions. Hiroshima Machinery Works comprises the Kan-on and Eba Plants, which have
turned their major product operations into consolidated operation subsidiaries and produce
a wide range of products. The Kan-on Plant produces a variety of industrial machinery such
as iron and steel manufacturing machinery, compressors, and rubber and tire machinery,
and also handles the manufacture and construction of various kinds of plants. The Eba Plant
handles the manufacture and construction of transportation systems, bridges, smokestacks,
and more.
Area (As of April 1, 2012)
Area (m2)
Site Building
Eba Plant 710,701 131,381
Kan-on Plant 680,947 217,092
Total 1,391,648 348,473
Hiroshima R & D Center (36,940) (27,069)
Note: Land and Building areas of Hiroshima Research Center are included in the Hiroshima Machinery Works.
93
Ⅷ. Works
Hiroshima Machinery Works
Annual Production Capacity
Transportation Systems
(Including Automatic Coil Transfer System
for Iron and Steel Works ........... 10 set)
.................................. 15,000 t
Compressor ...................... 160 units
Rubber and Tire Machinery
....................................... 240 units
Iron and Steel Manufacturing
Machinery .................... 50,000 t
Chemical Machinery ...... 1,000 t
Radiotherapy Systems ....... 12 units
Production Distribution
2005∼2008 2009∼
(Hiroshima Area Consolidated Group)
Bridge, Steel Stacks Transportation Systems ■
Iron and Steel Manufacturing Machinery Compressor ■
Aircraft Rubber and Tire Machinery ■ Transportation Systems ■ Iron and Steel Manufacturing Machinery
*
Medical Systems, OLED, General Machinery among others■ Compressor ■ Rubber and Tire Machinery ■
*General Machinery : Clean Room, Factory and Facilities Engineering Medical Systems, OLED and Others ■
35 59 80
40 65 41 37
60 54
20
4 3 40
7 27 34
2
20 7 20
15 11 21
9 11 9
0
2
0
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note: ※1. Figures in the column are in percentage (%) unit
※2. Figures on the column show the amount of total annual production.
(unit: billion yen)
94
Ⅸ. Approach for Solutions
Business
Establishment of Engineering Headquarters
EPC and Solutions Examples
95
Ⅸ.Approach for Solutions Business
Outline
Engineering Headquarters was established in January 2012 by consolidating the separate
in-house EPC (Engineering, Procurement and Construction) execution organizations with an
eye to future development.
MHI has a long, worldwide history of involvement in the construction of thermal power plants,
nuclear power plants, desalination plants, environmental and chemical plants, and in large-
scale infrastructure projects such as high-speed rail systems. In recent years, large
infrastructure projects have increased, and social needs have intensified for solutions
businesses as typified by smart communities and integrated water business. To respond, it
was necessary for MHI to prepare a system that would allow it to work on larger projects than
ever before.
Against this backdrop, MHI combined the EPC execution organization with its three business
headquarters – the Power Systems Headquarters, Nuclear Energy Systems Headquarters,
and Machinery & Steel Structures Headquarters – and the Sustainability Energy &
Environment Strategic Planning Department, which was under direct control of the company.
By consolidating these organizations as Engineering Headquarters, MHI strengthened its
ability to handle large EPC and infrastructure projects.
Engineering Headquarters intends to expand its business fields to include new solutions
エネルギー・環境事業統括戦略室
businesses, and to become a globally recognized engineering group with world-leading EPC
capabilities.
96
Ⅸ.Approach for Solutions Business
97
Ⅸ.Approach for Solutions Business
98
Ⅸ.Approach for Solutions Business
■Energy Solutions
Category Product Business Segments
● Gas Turbine Combined Cycle Power Plants (GTCC)
Thermal Power ● Integrated Coal Gasification Combined Cycle
Power Systems
Generation Plants(IGCC)
● Conventional Boiler & Turbine Generator Power Plants
Control Systems ● DIASYS Netmation Power Systems
Nuclear Power Generation ● Overseas Nuclear Power Plants Nuclear Energy Systems
● Geothermal Power Plants
Renewable Energy ● Offshore Wind Turbines Power Systems
● Lithium-ion Battery System (ESS)
■Environmental Solutions
Category Product Business Segments
● Seawater Desalination Plant Power Systems
Water Solutions ● Water Treatment Plants Machinery & Steel
● Water Reclamation Plants Infrastructure Systems
■Infrastructure Solutions
Category Product Business Segments
● Petrochemical Plants
Machinery & Steel
Chemical Plants ● Fertilizer Plants
Infrastructure Systems
● Methanol Plants
● Oil and Gas Production Plants
Machinery & Steel
Oil and Gas Plants ● Oil Refineries
Infrastructure Systems
● LNG Receiving Terminals
● High - speed Rail Systems Machinery & Steel
Transportation Systems
● Large - scale Transportation Systems Infrastructure Systems
■Total Solutions
MHI provides total solutions that concentrate its wide product range and superior technology
in comprehensive fields.
Category Examples
● Smart Community
Total Solution
● Total Energy Solution
99
Ⅹ. Research &
Development
Research & Development Organization
Research & Development Centers
Research & Development Activities
Research & Development Costs
Technical License Agreements
Intellectual Property
100
Ⅹ. Research & Development
1. Research & Development Organization
Technology & Innovation Headquarters plans innovative activities for the entire value chain Regarding product development, the Product Center established in the Technology &
ranging from sales to design, manufacture and after-sales services and support to carry out Innovation Headquarters serves as the core organization, offering technological and
activities on a company-wide basis with the aim of establishing a business model and development support for existing and next-generation products, and developing key leading-
improved manufacturing system to maintain its competitiveness in the global market. The edge technologies and key components technologies for products of the future.
Advanced Technology Research Center and five Research & Development Centers As for elemental technology, Technology Units develop R&D plans for various technological
(Nagasaki, Takasago, Hiroshima, Yokohama and Nagoya) promote our company's R&D and fields and promote technology transfer. In this way, we seek to realize our comprehensive
product development through close collaboration with the Business Segments responsible for capabilities to the fullest.
the business development of each product.
Technology &
Innovation
Headquarters
Technology Intellectual Business Process Production System Global SCM Information Applied Knowledge
Innovation Business
Planning Department Property Department Innovation Department Planning Department Planning Department Technology Department Training Center
Nagasaki Research & Takasago Research & Hiroshima Research & Yokohama Research & Nagoya Research & Advanced Technology
Development Center Development Center Development Center Development Center Development Center Research Center
101
Materials Technology
Chemical Technology
Manufacturing Technology
102
Ⅹ. Research & Development
The MHI Group maintains close cooperation between business headquarters and R&D
centers, promoting robust research and development supporting future business expansion
and greater product competitiveness in power systems, aerospace and other business fields.
103
Ⅹ. Research & Development
(6) Other
・Development of 15 models in the SAISON series of HVAC units for stores and 9 models in
the HYPERMULTI series of HVAC units for buildings incorporating high-efficiency
compressors, meeting performance standards for 2015 stipulated by Japan’s Act on the
Rational Use of Energy ahead of schedule
・Development of “ZI20A,” a machine enabling fast, high-precision grinding of a variety of
gears, and incorporating newly developed processing methods making grinding of internal
ring gears, external gears and stepped gears possible with a single unit
104
Ⅹ. Research & Development
(Notes)
From FY2010 the segment categories have been changed to Shipbuilding & Ocean Development, Power
Systems, Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems, Aerospace Systems, General Machinery & Special
Vehicles, and Others to comply with the March 2009 revisions to the “Accounting Standard for Disclosures
about Segments of an Enterprise and Related Information” (ASBJ No. 17). Given this change, the upper table
above presents the orders received and net sales by segment from FY2005 through FY2009 using the former
segment categories, and the lower table above presents the figures from FY2009 to FY2011 using the new
segment categories.
105
Ⅹ. Research & Development
106
Ⅹ. Research & Development
6. Intellectual Property
9,000 8,757
7,955
8,000 7,874
7,650
7,581
7,345
6,000 6,170
5,785
5,584 5,627 5,683
5,000
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,197
1,000 745
459
433 445 397
419 380 379 348 332 352
402 214 204 184 169 168 172 171
340 315 260 108 50 20 1 2 2 2
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Total Patent rights Trade mark
Utility model Design
4,000
3,500
3,000
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Total Patent rights Trade mark
107
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of
Mitsubishi Heavy
Industries, Ltd.
Group Companies of
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Group Business Status
108
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Group is a group of enterprises with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries,
Ltd., at its core and comprised of a total of 317 (179 local and 138 overseas) companies.
From design, manufacturing and construction to sales, after-sales service and general
service, the group is engaged in business in a wide variety of fields, enabling it to display the
strengths of its member companies.
■Business Areas
The industrial infrastructure field
The energy/power generation field
The environment/society field
The transport/defense field
109
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
(Consolidated Subsidiaries)
352.5
Mitsubishi Power Systems Florida, 100 Manufacture, sales and after-
(In millions of *1
Americas, Inc. U.S.A. (100) sale service of MHI products.
U.S. dollars)
57.5
Mitsubishi power Systems London, 100 Production / sale / service of
(In millions
Europe, Ltd. U.K. (100) products made by our company.
of Pound)
110
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
Waste-treatment equipment
business and oil / chemical plants
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Nishi-ku, inherited from the group, along with
Environmental & Chemical 1,000 100
Yokohama-shi consultancy, design, manufacturing,
Engineering Co., Ltd.
installation and after-sale service of
any related equipment.
Administration of multistory
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Nishi-ku,
350 100 carparking operations devolved
Parking Co., Ltd. Yokohama-shi
from MHI.
111
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
Infrastructure Systems
Machinery and Steel
112,000
MHI Aerospace Vietnam Hanoi, Production of products made by
(In millions 100
Co., Ltd. Vietnam our company.
of dong)
5,128.1
Mitsubishi Turbocharger Chonburi, Assembling / sale / parts supply of
(In millions 100
Asia Co., Ltd. Thailand products made by our company.
of Baht)
65
Mitsubishi Caterpillar Texas, Manufacture, sales and servicing
(In millions of 88.5
Forklift America Inc. U.S.A. of MHI products.
U.S. dollars)
Liaoning 37
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries 100 Manufacture and sales of MHI
Province, (In millions of
Forklift (Dalian) Co., Ltd. (71.5) products.
China U.S. dollars)
18.2
Mitsubishi Caterpillar Almere, The Production / sale / service of
(In millions 70
Forklift Europe B.V. Netherlands products made by our company.
of Euro)
112
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
415
MHI-VST Diesel Engines Mysore, Assembling / operation / sale of
(In millions 96.8
Machinery & Steel Infrastructure Systems
8.5
Mitsubishi Engine North Illinois, 100 Sale / service / parts supply of
(In millions of
America, Inc. U.S.A. (100) products made by our company.
U.S. dollars)
12.2
MHI Engine System Asia Assembling / operation / sale of
Singapore (In millions of 100
Pte. Ltd. products made by our company.
Singapore dollars)
4.3
Järvenpää, 100 Production / sales and service of
Rocla Oy (In millions
Finland (70) MHI poducts.
of Euro)
100
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Indiana, Manufacture and sales of MHI
Others (Air-Conditioning & Refrigeration Systems)
490.3
Thai Compressor Chachoengsao, Manufacture and sales of MHI
(In millions 58
Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Thailand products.
of Baht)
303
MHI Automotive Climate Chachoengsao, Manufacture and sales of
(In millions 100
Control (Thailand) Co., Ltd. Thailand MHI products.
of Baht)
113
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
114
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
115
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
Commissioned accounting
MHI Accounting Service, Minato-ku,
60 100 services for MHI and its
Ltd. Tokyo
affiliates.
116
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
20 100
Inspection Co., Ltd. Yokohama-shi products made by our company.
Development of computer
Hiroshima Dia System Co., Nishi-ku,
20 100 software for our company and
Ltd. Hiroshima-shi
associated companies.
Paris,
ATMEA S. A. S. (In millions 33 developing / authorization
France
of Euro) acquisition and sales.
North 13
Administration of SCR (DeNOx)
Cormetech, Inc. Carolina, (In millions of 50
systems production and sales.
U.S.A. U.S. dollars)
Setagaya-ku,
Caterpillar Japan Ltd. 15,000 33.3 Supply of MHI products.
Tokyo
General Muchinery &
Special Vehicles
General business
Nichiyu MHI Forklift Co., Nagaokakyo-shi,
300 33.4 collaboration for MHI logistics
Ltd. Kyoto
equipment (forklifts etc.).
117
ⅩⅠ. Group Companies of Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
Capital Proportion of
Name of Company Location voting rights Related information
(Million yen) held (%)
Others (Air-Conditioning &
Shinjuku-ku,
Shinryo Corporation 3,500 29.7 service of products made by
Tokyo
our company.
Others 31 companies
(Notes)
1. Name of segment is included in the major business column.
2. *1 Special subsidiaries.
3. *2 Although MHI's equity holding is less than 50%, this affiliate is listed as a
subsidiary because MHI exercises effective control over the company.
4. *3 Submits financial statements.
5. Proportions of voting rights shown in parentheses are for indirect possession.
6. In addition to the above, there are total of 249 nonconsolidated subsidiaries and
related companies not accounted for by equity-method.
118
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas
Activities
Overseas Network
Overseas Sales
Major Supply Records
119
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas Activities
Network
OverseasNetwork
1.1.Overseas
Asia
◆ ◆
■Middle East Office ●Taipei Liaison Office
■Abu
Dhabi Office ◆
■Hanoi Representative
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries de Mexico S.A. de C.V. (MHIMEX)
■Ho Chi Minh City Representative
Africa
●Representative Office for Asia Pacific
◆
●Jakarta Liaison Office
◆MHI Power Systems Egypt, LLC (MPS-EG) Central and South America
◆MHI Equipment and Services Africa S.A. (MESA)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Air-Conditioners Australia, Pty. Ltd. (MHIAA)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Australia, Pty. Ltd. (MHIAU)
■Johannesburg Branch
Oceania ◆
◆MHIEC Environmental (Beijing) Co., Ltd.
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Changshu) Machinery Co.,Ltd. (MHICM) ◆ ◆Mitsubishi Industrias Pesadas do Brasil Ltda. (MHIB)
◆MHI Sul Americana Distribuidora de Motores Ltda. (MSA)
◆MCF Forklift (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. (MCFC)
◆MHI Automotive Climate Control (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. (MACC) ◆MLP Hong Kong Ltd. ◆CBC Industrias Pesadas S.A. (CBC)
◆MHI Residential Air-Conditioners (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. ◆L&T MHI Boilers Private Limited (LMBP)
◆MHI Engine System Hong Kong Ltd. (MHIES-H) ◆MHI-VST Diesel Engines Private Ltd. (MVDE)
◆MHI Engine System (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd. (MHIES-SZ) ◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries India Precision Tools, Ltd. (MHI-IPT) ◆MHI Industrial Engineering & Services Private Ltd. (MIES)
◆MHI Machine Tool Ltd. (MMH) ◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries India Private Ltd. (MHII) ◆Mitsubishi Caterpillar Forklift Asia Pte Ltd. (MCFS)
◆MHI Shenyang Pump Engineering Co., Ltd. (MSPE) ◆Mitsubishi Power Systems India Private, Ltd. ◆Mitsubishi Power Systems (Asia Pacific) Pte. Ltd. (MPS-AP)
◆MHI Turbo Engineering Co. (Shanghai) (MTEC) ◆MHI Engineering and Industrial Projects India Private Ltd. ◆MHI-Pornchai Machinery Co., Ltd. (MPM)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Air-conditioners (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. (MHIAS) ◆Anupam-MHI Industries Ltd. ◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries-Mahajak Air Conditioners Co., Ltd. (MACO)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries BFG Gas Turbine Service (Nanjing) Co., Ltd. (MHI-BFGGT) ◆Mitsubishi-Hitachi Metals Machinery South Asia Private Ltd. (MHSA) ◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Thailand) Ltd. (MHIT)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Dongfang Gas Turbine (Guangzhou) Co., Ltd. ◆PT. MHI Engine System Indonesia (MHIES-I) ◆Mitsubishi Power Systems (Thailand) Ltd. (MPS-T)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (China) Co., Ltd. (MHIC) ◆P.T. Power Systems Service Indonesia (P.T. POSSI) ◆Mitsubishi Turbocharger Asia Co., Ltd. (MTA)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Forklift (Dalian) Co., Ltd. (MFD) ◆PT.MPS Indonesia ◆Thai Compressor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (THACOM)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries-Haier (Qingdao) Air-Conditioners Co., Ltd. (MHAQ) ◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Korea, Ltd. (MHIK) ◆MHI Automotive climate control (Thailand) Co., Ltd.
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, (Hong Kong) Ltd. (MHIH) ◆MHI Engine System Philippines, Inc. (MHIES-P) ◆MHI Aerospace Vietnam Co., Ltd. (MHIVA)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries-Jinling Air-Conditioners Company, Ltd. (MJA) ◆MHI Technical Services Corporation (MTS) ◆MHI Engine System Vietnam Co., Ltd. (MHIES-V)
◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. (MHISH) ◆Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Philippines, Inc. (MHIP)
◆Mitsubishi-Hitachi Metals Machinery (Shanghai), Inc. (MHS) ◆MHI Engine System Asia Pte. Ltd. (MHIES-A)
● Overseas Offices ■ Representatives ◆ Overseas Subsidiaries
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas Activities
2. Overseas Sales
(Unit : millions of yen)
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Asia 212,793 324,696 416,846 522,450 437,470 452,216 439,187 390,701 373,733 381,858
(8.2) (13.7) (16.1) (18.7) (14.3) (14.1) (13.0) (13.3) (12.9) (13.5)
North 271,239 262,145 265,596 322,550 371,865 435,833 414,053 360,183 347,444 296,032
America (10.5) (11.1) (10.2) (11.6) (12.1) (13.6) (12.3) (12.2) (12.0) (10.5)
Europe 210,549 136,775 162,303 182,893 237,428 258,811 296,224 223,334 217,087 225,759
(8.1) (5.7) (6.3) (6.5) (7.8) (8.1) (8.8) (7.6) (7.5) (8.0)
Central and 68,400 95,159 147,113 108,588 123,705 222,987 226,198 184,790 200,850 142,165
South America (2.6) (4.0) (5.7) (3.9) (4.0) (6.9) (6.7) (6.3) (6.9) (5.0)
The 55,574 40,812 28,131 57,265 257,800 168,860 230,001 170,760 102,690 68,740
Middle East (2.1) (1.7) (1.1) (2.0) (8.4) (5.3) (6.8) (5.8) (3.5) (2.4)
Africa 11,673 26,612 19,967 16,753 18,909 9,009 21,581 138,725 169,283 51,644
(0.5) (1.1) (0.8) (0.6) (0.6) (0.3) (0.6) (4.7) (5.8) (1.8)
Oceania 7,646 6,456 9,409 15,486 15,465 13,419 25,022 10,198 12,101 14,828
(0.3) (0.3) (0.3) (0.6) (0.5) (0.4) (0.7) (0.4) (0.4) (0.5)
Total
837,878 892,658 1,049,367 1,225,989 1,462,646 1,561,139 1,652,269 1,478,695 1,423,191 1,181,029
(32.3) (37.6) (40.5) (43.9) (47.7) (48.7) (48.9) (50.3) (49.0) (41.9)
121
Consolidated
2,593,894 2,373,440 2,590,733 2,792,108 3,068,504 3,203,085 3,375,674 2,940,887 2,903,770 2,820,932
Sales
( ) : The share of overseas sales in the consolidated sales (Unit : %)
U.S.A. Power Gas Turbine/Steam Fore River 800MW Excelon 2003 2/1 M501G / 250MW
Systems Turbine Combined Cycle Plant
Power
U.S.A. Systems Gas Turbine West County Energy Florida Power & Light Company 2009 GTx9 250MW × 6
Power
U.S.A. Gas Turbine Georgia Power McDonough Unit Georgia Power Company 2009 GTx6 250MW × 6
Systems
U.S.A. Power Gas Turbine Lagoon Creek III Tenesee Valley Authority 2010 GTx2 550MW
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Rock River I Rock River, LLC. 2001 50 MWT-1000 × 50
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Mountain View II Mountain View Ⅱ Power Partner, 2001 37 MWT-600 × 37
Systems LLC.
Power
U.S.A. Wind Turbine Texas Oregon Condon I Condon Wind Power, LLC. 2001 41 MWT-600 × 41
Systems
122
Power
U.S.A. Systems Wind Turbine Combine Hills Eurus Combine Hills Ⅰ, LLC. 2003 41 MWT-1000A
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Brazos Brazos Wind, LP. 2003 160 MWT-1000A
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine San Juan Mesa San Juan Mesa Wind, LLC. 2005 120 MWT-62 / 1.0(MWT-1000A)
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Iowa Wind Power 2005 Expansion Mid American Energy, Co. 2005 50 MWT-62 / 1.0(MWT-1000A)
Systems Project
Power
U.S.A. Wind Turbine Buena Vista 38MW Project Buena Vista Energy, LLC. 2006 38 MWT-62 / 1.0(MWT-1000A)
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Aragonne Mesa Project Aragonne Wind, LLC. 2006 90 MWT-62 / 1.0(MWT-1000A)
Systems
Power
U.S.A. Systems Wind Turbine Sweet Water Wind Power Project Sweet Water Wind 4, LLC. 2007 135 MWT-62 / 1.0(MWT-1000A)
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Ceder Creek Wind Power Project Ceder Creek Wind Energy, LLC. 2007 221 MWT-62 / 1.0(MWT-1000A)
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Dillon Iberdrola Renewables, Inc. 2008 45 MWT-62 / 1.0
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Roscoe E-ON Climate & Renewables 2008 209 MWT-62 / 1.0
Systems
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas Activities
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Bull Creek Wind Project Eurus Energy America, Co. 2008 180 MWT-62 / 1.0
Systems
Power
U.S.A. Systems Wind Turbine Goat Mountain 2 Edison Mission Energy 2009 29 MWT-95 / 2.4
Power
U.S.A. Wind Turbine Penascal 1 Iberdrola Renewables, Inc. 2009 84 MWT-92 / 2.4
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Inadale Inadale Wind Farm, LLC. 2009 197 MWT-62 / 1.0
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Gulf Wind Babcock & Brown Power 2009 118 MWT-95 / 2.4
Systems Operating Partners LLC.
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Combine Hills 2 Eurus Energy America, Co. 2009 63 MWT-62 / 1.0
Systems
Power
U.S.A. Wind Turbine Penascal 2 Iberdrola Renewables, Inc. 2010 84 MWT-92 / 2.4
Systems
123
Power
U.S.A. Systems Wind Turbine Elm Creek 2 Wind Power Project Iberdrola Renewables, Inc. 2011 62 MWT-95 / 2.4
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Juniper Canyon Iberdrola Renewables, Inc. 2011 63 MWT-95 / 2.4
Systems
U.S.A. Power Wind Turbine Foundation Safeway 2.0 Foundation windpower, LLC. 2011 2 MWT-62 / 1.0
Systems
Machinery & Steel Continuous pickling
U.S.A. Infrastructure Systems Metals Machinery and tandem cold mill Several North America, Inc. 2011
Argentina Power Gas Turbine/Steam Costanera 800MW Central Costanera S. A. 1999 2/1 M701F / 312MW
Systems Turbine Combined Cycle Plant
Argentina Power Gas Turbine/Steam Parana 830MW AES Parana S.A. 2001 2/1/2 M701F3 / 319MW / 373T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG Combined Cycle Plant
Power Gas Turbine/Steam San Isidro 370MW Compania Electrica San Isidro
Chile 2002 1/1/1 M701F / 130MW / 268T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG Combined Cycle Plant A.A.
Chile Power Gas Turbine/Steam San Isidro Ⅱ 377MW EMPRESA NACIONAL DE 2008 1/1/1 M701F / 136MW / 369T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG Combined Cycle Plant ELECTRICIDAD S.A.
Power Boiler/Steam Empresa Electrica Guacolda S. A. 2009 STx1, Bx1 152MW
Chile Systems Turbine GUACOLDA No. 3
Power Boiler/Steam
Chile Systems Turbine GUACOLDA No. 4 Empresa Electrica Guacolda S. A. 2010 STx1, Bx1 152MW
Mexico Power Boiler/Steam Petacalco #3, 4 CFE 1993 2/2 1,185T/H / 350MW
Systems Turbine
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas Activities
Mexico Power Boiler/Steam Pacifico Comision Federal de Electrcidad 2010 STX1, Bx1 648MW
Systems Turbine
Mexico Power Gas Turbine/Steam Chihuahua 435MW Norelec Del Norte S. V. C. V. 2001 2/1 M501F / 160MW
Systems Turbine Combined Cycle Plant
Power Gas Turbine/Steam Campeche 254MW Trans Alta Campeche,
Mexico Systems Turbine/HRSG Combined Cycle Plant S. A. de C. V. 2001 1/1/1 M501F / 90MW / 486T/H
Mexico Power Gas Turbine/Steam Altamira II 503MW ELECTRICIDAD de AGUILA de 2002 2/1 M501F3 / 189MW
Systems Turbine Combined Cycle Plant ALTAMIRA S.A. de R.L.de C.V.
Mexico Power Gas Turbine/Steam Tuxpan Ⅲ Electricidad Agulila de 2003 2/1 M501F3 / 498MW
Systems Turbine Tuxpan S.de R.L.de C.V.
Power Gas Turbine/Steam Electricidad Agulila de
Mexico Systems Turbine Tuxpan Ⅳ Tuxpan S.de R.L.de C.V. 2003 2/1 M501F3 / 498MW
124
Mexico Power Gas Turbine/Steam Tuxpan Ⅴ Kyushu Electric Power / 2006 2/1/2 M501F / 187MW / 455T/H
Systems Turbine Mitsubishi Corporation (CFE)
Machinery & Steel PETROQUIMICA MORELOS.
Mexico Infrastructure Systems Chemical Plant Polyethylene Plant
S.A DE C.V.
2006 1
Indonesia Power Gas Turbine/Steam Grati 868MW Combined PLN 1996 6/1 701D / 189.5MW
Systems Turbine Cycle Plant
Indonesia Power Boiler/Gas Turbine Muara Karang PT. PLN (Persero) 2009 Bx2, GTx2 496MW
Systems
Machinery & Steel P.T. KALTIM PARNA
Indonesia Infrastructure Systems Chemical Plant Ammonia Plant
INDUSTRI
2002 1
Power
Asia Korea Steam Turbine Gwangyang No.9 POSCO 2006 1 100MW
Systems
Korea Power Gas Turbine/Steam Gunsan Combined Cycle Power Plant Korea Western Power Co., Ltd. 2009 STx1, GTx2 779MW
Systems Turbine
Thailand Power Gas Turbine/Steam Wang Noi 720MW Combined EGAT 1998 2/1/2 M701F / 250MW / 633T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG Cycle Plant Stage II
Thailand Power Gas Turbine/Steam Ratchaburi (Block 1) Ratchaburi Power Company 2008 2/1/2 M701F / 270MW / 364T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG 700MW Combined Cycle Plant Limited
Power Gas Turbine/Steam Ratchaburi (Block 2) Ratchaburi Power Company
Thailand 2008 2/1/2 M701F / 270MW / 364T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG 700MW Combined Cycle Plant Limited
Power Gas Turbine/Steam South Bangkok (Block 3)
Thailand EGAT 2008 2/1/2 M701F / 275MW / 365T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG 747MW Combined Cycle Plant
Power Boiler/Steam
Thailand Systems Turbine Ratchaburi #1, 2 EGAT 1999 2/2 2,530T/H / 700MW
Thailand Power Boiler/Steam Map Ta Phut BLCP Power 2006 2/2 2,285T/H / 700MW
Systems Turbine
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas Activities
Taiwan Power Boiler/Gas Turbine/ Dah-Tarn Stage Ⅱ Taiwan Power Company 2007
STx4, Bx8,
720MW × 4
Systems Steam Turbine GTx8
Taiwan Power Gas Turbine Chang Bin 490MW Star Energy 2004 2 M501F / 185MW
Systems Combined Cycle Plant
China Power Gas Turbine Qianwan LNG Power Plant Dong Fang Steam Turbine Works 2006 1 M701F
Systems No.2
Power Shenzhen Guang Qian Electric
China Systems Gas Turbine QIANWAN Power Co., Ltd. (GDPAMC) 2007 GTx3 3×400MW
Machinery & Steel Continuous pickling and tandem cold Hebei Shougang Qian'an Iron & Steel
Asia China Infrastructure Systems Metals Machinery 2012
mill Co., Ltd.
China(Macau) Machinery & Steel Refuse Incineration Macau waste incineration plant Macau Special Administrative Region 2008 3 288T/D × 3
Infrastructure Systems Plant (expanded)
Machinery & Steel Ningbo Mitsubishi Chemical
China Infrastructure Systems Chemical Plant Purified Terephthalic Acid
Corporation
2006 1
China Power Gas Turbine/Steam Blast furnace gas-fired Angang Group International
2007 1/1 M701S(F) / 117MW
Systems Turbine Combined Cycle Plant Trade Corporation
Power Gas Turbine/Steam Blast furnace gas-fired
China Systems Turbine Combined Cycle Plant Maanshan Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. 2007 1/1 M701S(DA) / 63MW
Pakistan Power Diesel Diesel Goverating Plant Japan Power Generation 2000 24 18KU30(5.65MW)
Systems
Power Boiler/Steam
Pakistan Systems Turbine Lal Pir Power Station AES 1997 1/1 1,200T/H / 362MW
127
Power Boiler/Steam
Philippines Pagbilao Power Station #1, 2 HOPEWELL 1995 2/2 1,250T/H / 385MW
Systems Turbine
Power Boiler/Steam
Philippines Masinloc Stage I, II PLN 1998 2/2 1,050T/H / 300MW
Systems Turbine
Power Gas Turbine/Steam Ilijan 1200MW Combined
Philippines Systems Turbine Cycle Plant KEPCO ILIJAN CORPORATION 2002 4/2/4 M501G / 234MW
Machinery & Steel Gas and oil Rejuvenation and Revamp for Gas
Malaysia Infrastructure Systems production facility Processing Plant & Export Terminal
PETRONAS GAS BHD. 2005 1
Egypt Power Gas Turbine Cairo North 750MW Cairo Electricity Production 2004 2 M701F / 273MW
Systems Combined Cycle Plant
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas Activities
Power
Middle East Egypt Steam Turbine Nubaria WDFPC 2006 2 255MW
Systems
Egypt Power Gas Turbine El Atf Middle Delta Electricity Production Company 2009 GTx2 750MW
Systems
Egypt Power Gas Turbine Sidi Krir West Delta Electricity Production Company 2009 GTx2 750MW
Systems
Machinery & Steel Container Handling Container Crane for Damietta Container & Cargo
Egypt Infrastructure Systems Crane Damietta Port Handling Co. 2001 4
Machinery & Steel Container Handling Rubber Tyred Gantry Crane Damietta Container & Cargo
Egypt Infrastructure Systems Crane for Damietta Port Handling Co. 2001 14
Power
Kuwait Boiler Sabiya Power Station #1 ~ 8 MEW 2000/2001 8/8 925.6T/H / 300MW
Systems
Power Boiler/Steam
Saudi Arabia Systems Turbine Qurayyah Power Station #3,4 SCECO EAST 1992 2/2 2,080T/H / 600MW
Saudi Arabia Power Boiler/Steam Qurayyah Power Station #1,2 SCECO EAST 1988/1989 2/2 2,080T/H / 600MW
Systems Turbine
Power Boiler/Steam Turbine/ STx5, Bx9,
Saudi Arabia Systems Desalination Plant Rabigh IWSPP Rabigh Arabian Water & Electricity Company 2009 ROx16 120MW × 5
Power Boiler/Steam Turbine/ STx3, Bx3, 340MW × 3
Saudi Arabia Systems Desalination Plant Shuqaiq IWPP Shuqaiq Water and Electricity Company 2011 ROx16 216,000m3/day
Machinery & Steel SAUDI METHANOL COMPANY
Saudi Arabia Infrastructure Systems Chemical Plant Methanol Plant (AR-RAZI) 2008 1
North Bulgaria Power Wind Turbine Kaliakra Kaliakra Wind Power A.D. 2008 35 MWT-62 / 1.0
Europe Systems
Iceland Power Geothermal Turbine Nesjavetlir No.3 Reykjavik City 2001 1 30MW
Systems
ⅩⅡ. Statement of Overseas Activities
Power
Italy Steam Turbine Torrevaldaliga ENELPOWER 2010 STX3 660MW
Systems
Power Gas Turbine/Steam Cristobal Colon Combined
Spain ENDESA 2006 1/1/1 M701F / 135MW / 669T/H
Systems Turbine/HRSG Cycle Power Plant
129
Power
Australia Systems Gas Turbine Pinjarra Co-Generation Unit#2 Alinta Co-Generation (Pinjarra)Pty 2006 1 M701DA
Power
Kenya Systems Diesel Diesel Goverating Plant Kenya Power Co., Ltd. 1999 6 9L 58/64(12.5MW)
Power
Kenya Systems Geothermal Turbine Olkaria II KENGEN, Ltd. 2004 2 3.4MW × 2
Power
Kenya Systems Geothermal Turbine Olkaria II Unit-3 (Geothermal) The Kenya Electricty Generating Company Ltd. 2010 STx1 35MW × 1
New Zealand Power Geothermal Turbine Mokai II Tuaropaki Power Co., Ltd. 2005 1 19.2MW × 1
Systems
ⅩⅢ. Society &
Environment
130
ⅩⅢ. Society & Environment
For more detailed information, please refer to the CSR Report page of MHI’s corporate
website.
http://www.mhi.co.jp/en/csr/csrreport/
131
ⅩⅢ. Society & Environment
2. Management
Corporate Governance
■Current Status of Corporate Governance and Internal Controls
●Strengthening the oversight functions of the Board of Directors through such
measures as appointing outside directors
The Board of Directors makes important key management decisions and oversees the
execution of business operations, while statutory auditors audit the execution of duties of
directors and other matters.
Currently, 3 of the company’s 19 directors and 3 of its 5 statutory auditors are from outside
MHI. These outside directors and statutory auditors provide advice and oversight to the
management of MHI based on their broad range of experience and considerable insight as
managers, administrators and specialists. They operate from Strengthening the oversight
functions of the Board of Directors through such measures as appointing outside directors an
unbiased position which is independent from the company’s management team. The
company has also streamlined the Board of Directors, shortened the term of office, and
introduced an Executive Officer System. MHI has sought through these measures to
reinforce the oversight functions of the Board of Directors and to clarify the roles and
responsibilities of the directors who make decisions on key management issues and oversee
the overall management of the company as well as the roles and responsibilities of the senior
vice presidents who execute business.
MHI has also established an Executive Committee to serve as a forum for discussing
important matters related to business execution. This allows for a more cohesive approach in
terms of discussions as part of the operational execution framework centered on the
President, and consequently leads to more effective management decisions and business
execution.
In accordance with the auditing policy and auditing plan determined by the Board of Statutory
Auditors, statutory auditors attend key meetings, such those held by the Board of Directors,
the Executive Committee, and Business Plan Meetings, to study and monitor the
management operation status. They also examine legal and regulatory compliance, and
monitor the development and operation of internal control systems, including those related to
financial reporting. These auditing operations enable them to ascertain whether the directors
are executing their duties in compliance with laws and Articles of Incorporation, and whether
company affairs are being appropriately executed.
Statutory auditors also periodically exchange information and opinions with the Management
Audit Department and accounting auditors, and collaborate closely with them in other ways,
including receiving audit results and attending accounting audits. The Statutory Auditors’
Office has been set up with its own dedicated staff to support the implementation of auditing
tasks and facilitate the work carried out by statutory auditors.
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ⅩⅢ. Society & Environment
133
ⅩⅢ. Society & Environment
Compliance
We have promoted the business activities MHI fairly and faithfully in order to “base our
activities on honesty, harmony, and a clear distinction between public and private life.” As a
more specific activity guideline, we established the MHI Compliance Guideline in 2001.
■ Business activities
We will conduct sensible company activities in compliance with laws and in an appropriate
manner, and contribute to society by providing safe, high-quality products and services.
1. We will endeavor to provide safe, high-quality products and services.
2. In conducting business activities, we will pursue fair and free intercorporate competition in
compliance with the Antimonopoly Act, the Act against Delays in the Payment of
Subcontract Proceeds, etc. to Subcontractors, the Construction Business Act, and other
relevant regulations.
3. Regarding gift-giving and entertainment with civil officers and suppliers, we will not violate
laws or deviate from socially accepted practices.
4. We will implement appropriate accounting and tax accounting in accordance with relevant
laws, accounting standards, and internal regulations.
5. In relation to overseas business, we will follow laws related to import and export and local
laws.
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ⅩⅢ. Society & Environment
3. Environmental Report
MHI has contributed to society through the manufacture of products since its founding.
Broadly speaking, the company now focuses on the environment with two overriding goals:
first, to decrease the burdens on the environment imposed by manufacturing activities;
second, to develop technology useful for solving the problems of the environment and
energy. In 1996 we established the Environment Committee to further contribute to society
and the harmonious coexistence of people and the natural environment. The environmental
management system is constructed in accordance with the Basic Policy on Environmental
Matters and the seven Guidelines established by the company.
■ To achieve its basic policy on the environment, MHI has set the following seven
guidelines.
1. Accord high priority to environmental protection within company operations, and take steps
company-wide to protect and enhance the environment.
2. Clarify roles and responsibilities regarding environmental protection by developing an
organized structure to deal with environmental protection matters, defining environment-
related procedures, etc.
3. Strive to alleviate burden on the environment in all aspects of company business activities
– from product R&D and design to procurement of raw materials, manufacture, transport,
usage, servicing and disposal – through pollution prevention, conservation of resources,
energy saving, waste reduction, reuse and recycling.
4. Strive to develop and provide advanced, highly reliable, wholly proprietary technologies
and products that will contribute to solving environmental and energy problems.
5. Strive continuously to improve and enhance environmental protection activities not only by
fully complying with environmental laws and regulations but also, when necessary, by
establishing, implementing and evaluating independent standards and setting
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ⅩⅢ. Society & Environment
136
ⅩⅢ. Society & Environment
4. Social Report
Contributions to Society
MHI is involved in a wide range of local community programs and youth programs, in line with
the company’s policy on social contribution activities at the community level. In a bid to build
closer relationships with local communities, MHI will soon be launching a new initiative that
involves working with NPOs and other organizations to address social issues at the local
level.
Transfer “the heart of Japanese manufacturing” as well as “the arts of science and
technology” to the next generation.
MHI has developed and produced more than 700 kinds of products in its long history,
cultivating “the heart of Japanese manufacturing” and “the arts of science and technology”. To
pass its knowledge and skills onto succeeding generations, MHI has a tradition of organizing
educational activities such as science classes with experiments for children.
Fulfilling our Policy on Socially Beneficial Activities
Upbringing of
Local contribution the next generation
Live together with Transfer “the heart of Japanese
communities and contribute to manufacturing” as well as
their development “the arts of science and technology”
to the next generation
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ⅩⅣ. Mitsubishi Minatomirai
Industrial Museum
138
ⅩⅣ. Mitsubishi Minatomirai
Industrial Museum
■ Name
Mitsubishi Minatomirai Industrial Museum
■ Location
Mitsubishi Juko Yokohama Building, 3-3-1
Minatomirai, Nishi-ku, Yokohama-shi, Kanagawa
■ Opening
June 1, 1994
■ Outline
The Mitsubishi Minatomirai Industrial Museum was opened to promote public understanding of
the roles of technology in supporting and enriching lives and society. The interactive style of the
exhibitions at the museum makes it fun to learn about new technologies.
The museum also actively promotes the education of children and students. For example,
students from elementary, junior high and senior high schools, and universities can visit the
museum to participate in extra curricular activities free of charge (advanced reservations are
required). The biggest mission for the museum over the long term is to enlighten the younger
generations who are to inherit tomorrow’s world, and provide a place where youth can
experience technology and further feed their dreams.
■ Introduction
The museum is organized into six zones based on the following themes: “Aerospace”,
“Ocean”, “Transportation”, “Daily Life Discovery”, “Environment/Energy” and “Technology
Quest”. Visitors can improve their understanding of science and technology in all of these
areas, and enjoy the chance of experiencing the fun aspects of manufacturing directly at
the Trial Square.
■ Transportation Information
● Forarrival by train,
Take the Minatomirai Line to Minatomirai Station. From the exit for Keyaki-dori Ave., it’s a
3-minute walk.
Take the JR Negishi Line or Yokohama Subway Line to Sakuragi-cho Station. From
there, it’s an 8-minute walk.
● Forarrival by car,
Please use the fee-of-charge parking area in the basement of the Mitsubishi Juko
Yokohama Building, in front of the exit of the Minatomirai Ramp of the Shuto Expressway
Yokohane Branch.
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ⅩⅣ. Mitsubishi Minatomirai
Industrial Museum
■ Open
10:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m.(admission until 4:30 p.m.)
■ Closed
Every Monday (the following day if Monday is a national holiday); year-end and New Year;
and on specified closed days
■ Admission fees
300 yen for adults admission; 200 yen for junior and senior high school students; 100 yen
for elementary school students. 100 yen discount per person for groups (10 persons or
more).
※ Admission is free for visitors aged 65 or over, and visitors escorting disabled people.
(Please present an appropriate certificate or card.)
Fee admission will be free for elementary school, junior high school, high school, and
university field trip visits (prior booking required).
■ For inquiries
Mitsubishi Minatomirai Industrial Museum
TEL. 045-200-7351 FAX. 045-200-9902
http://www.mhi.co.jp/en/museum/
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ⅩⅤ. Address List
141
ⅩⅤ. Address List
■ Head Office
Mitsubishi Heavy 2-16-5 Konan, Minato-ku, Tokyo
Industries Head office Phone: 81-3-6716-3111
Building Fax: 81-3-6716-5800
■ Business Segments
SHIPBUILDING & (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Head Office Building, Nagasaki
OCEAN Shipyard & Machinery Works, Kobe Shipyard & Machinery
DEVELOPMENT Works, Shimonoseki Shipyard & Machinery Works, Yokohama
Dockyard & Machinery Works)
Phone: 81-3-6716-3111
MACHINERY & STEEL (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Head Office Building, Kobe
INFRASTRUCTURE Shipyard & Machinery Works, Hiroshima Machinery Works,
SYSTEMS Mihara Machinery Works, Iwatsuka Plant)
Phone: 81-3-6716-3111
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ⅩⅤ. Address List
■ Works
Nagasaki Shipyard 1-1 Akunouramachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
& Machinery Works Phone: 81-95-828-4121
Fax: 81-95-828-4034
143
ⅩⅤ. Address List
■ Domestic Office
Kansai Office 1-3-20 Tosabori, Nishi-ku, Osaka-shi, Osaka
Phone: 81-6-6446-4000
Fax: 81-6-6446-4006
Chubu Office Sakae Sun City Bldg. 14F, 4-1-8 Sakae, Naka-ku,
Nagoya-shi, Aichi
Phone: 81-52-265-1311
Fax: 81-52-265-1440
Hokkaido Office Hokkaido Bldg. 7F, 4-1 Nishi, Kita2-jo, Chuo-ku, Sapporo-shi,
Hokkaido
Phone: 81-11-261-1541
Fax: 81-11-221-4425
Tohoku Office Toryo Bldg. 8F, 1-8-1 Ichiban-cho, Aoba-ku, Sendai-shi, Miyagi
Phone: 81-22-264-1811
Fax: 81-22-261-3561
Hokuriku Office Urban Place Bldg. 8F, 18-7 Ushijima-cho, Toyama-shi, Toyama
Phone: 81-76-432-8089
Fax: 81-76-432-8087
144
ⅩⅤ. Address List
145
ⅩⅤ. Address List
■ Overseas Offices
Representative Office for 150 Beach Road, #33-05/08 Gateway West,
Asia Pacific Singapore 189720
Phone: 65-6305-5470
Telefax: 65-6396-5905
Jakarta Liaison Office 12th Floor, Sentral Senayan Ⅱ JI. Asia Africa No.8,
Gelora Bung Karno, Senayan Jakarta 10270, Indonesia
Phone: 62-21-5797-4430
Telefax: 62-21-5797-4435
Taipei Liaison Office 8F-1, Worldwide House131, Min Sheng E. Rd., Sec. 3,
Taipei 105, Taiwan
Phone: 886-2-8712-3330
Telefax: 886-2-8712-3332
■ Representatives
Moscow Representative Office 1302 (13F), Entrance No.3,
12 Krasnopresnenskaya nab.,
World Trade Center, Moscow, 123610, Russia
Phone: 7-495-258-1471
Telefax: 7-495-258-1468
Ho Chi Minh City #410, 4th Floor, Sun Wah Tower, 115 Nguyen Hue Boulevard,
Representative District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Phone: 848-3824-3279
Telefax: 848-3824-2874
Hanoi R907-908, 9th Floor, Pacific Place, 83B Ly Thuong Kiet Str.,
Representative Hanoi, Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Phone: 844-3933-3941
Telefax: 844-3933-3947
Middle East Office Dubai Airport Free Zone, Phasa 6 EA, Office 519
P.O.Box 293626, Dubai, U.A.E.
Phone: 971-4-2993329
Telefax: 971-4-2993320
146
ⅩⅤ. Address List
Abu Dhabi Office P.O.Box 135064 Office No.302, 3rd Floor, Injazat Building,
Mohamed Bin Zayed City, Abu Dhabi, U.A.E.
Phone: 971-2-5592191
Telefax: 971-2-5592327
147
ⅩⅥ. PR materials
148
ⅩⅥ. PR materials
PR materials
Guide to Research and Japanese & Technology Planning Outline of each Research and
Devlopment Centers English Dept. Devlopment Centers
Promotion video of Works, ・Japanese Each Works,Divisions, and Outline of each Works, Divisions, and
Divisions, and Research ・English Research and
Research and Development Centers
and Development Centers ・Otherlanguages Development Centers
Technical Review
・Japanese Technical Planning Detailed introduction to company's technologies
・English Dept. in each field, aimed at technical specialists
Guide to Mitsubishi Heavy Global Strategic Outline of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Industries group companies ・Japanese
Planning & Operations
Headquarters group companies in Japan
Business Report
Corporate Business report in English, based on
Annual Report ・English Communication Dept. consolidated accounts
CSR Report
Report on company's approach and activities
(Social and ・Japanese Corporate
regarding Corporate Social Responsibility and
Environmental ・English Communication Dept.
environmental protection
Report)
Company PR
Mitsubishi Heavy ・Japanese Corporate PR journal of company's products
Industries graph ・English Communication Dept. and technology.lssued 4 times a year
Japanese & Corporate Introduction to exhibition facility
Guide to M's Square
English Communication Dept. of M's Square
Guide to Corporate
Mitsubishi Minatomirai ・Japanese Communication Dept. Introduction to exhibition facility of Mitsubishi
( )
Industrial Museum ・English Mitsubishi Minatomirai Minatomirai Industrial Museum
Industrial Museum
149