Muscat Daily

Pandemic drives sea freight prices to record high

-

London, UK – Container shipping prices have reached record highs some 18 months after the outbreak of the coronaviru­s pandemic which disrupted maritime logistics chains and drove demand sky-high.

"We are basically running out of vessels and of empty containers," Alan Murphy, head of the consultanc­y Sea Intelligen­ce, told AFP.

"There's been a massive shortage of empty containers, they are in the wrong place, they are stuck in ports and not in Asia ready to be loaded."

The Freightos Baltic Index, a benchmark for major shipping routes, has more than tripled in a year to nearly US$7,000 for a trip from China to the west coast of the United States.

A trip to Europe has exceeded US$10,000, compared with just US$1,600 at the same time last year.

Murphy said the unpreceden­ted situation compounded the troubles of the last 10 years, which he said had been "really bad for the shipping lines".

Blighted by overcapaci­ty in the sector, he said the firms "were losing money every time they were moving a container". 'Unpreceden­ted drop'

The COVID-19 pandemic, which initially brought global shipping to a virtual standstill, did not bode well for the industry and led to "an unpreceden­ted drop in demand", said Didier Rabattu, of Lombard Odier Investment Managers.

But this did not account for the trends among US and European consumers who during lockdown stopped spending in restaurant­s and theatres or going on holiday and instead used their money to purchase material goods – many of them imported from Asia.

"Imagine how many television­s you can buy if you don't go skiing for a week with four people?" said Paul Tourret, director of France's Higher Institute of Maritime Economics (ISEMAR).

Disruption­s to loading and unloading operations, from dockers falling ill and Covid restrictio­ns to unforseen events like the shipping backlog caused the blockage of the Suez Canal in March, have only exacerbate­d the trend.

As a result, ship owners have never been in better shape.

The Marseille-based CMA CGM container and shipping company for example posted a net profit of more than US$2bn for the first quarter of 2021 alone, 40 times more than the previous year. Its Danish competitor AP Moller-Maersk announced an even higher net profit of US$2.7bn for the first three months of the year – 13 times what it saw last year.

"It is true that ship owners are making a lot of money at the moment," Tourret said.

"But it is also a way for them to renew their fleets and accelerate their liquefied natural gas (LNG) programmes," he added.

CMA CGM placed an order in April for 22 container ships, more than half of which are LNGpowered.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman