GENERAL Archives - Page 21 of 68 - SHIP IP LTD

Britain blocked the entry of the poisoned ship Nae Sao Paulo into the Strait of Gibraltar. It is not known what the route of the ship will be after the decision.

It was learned that the UK blocked the entrance of the Nae Sao Paulo ship, which contains asbestos and intense toxic waste, into the Strait of Gibraltar.

According to the news published by Brazil, the UK announced that the ship will not be able to enter the Strait of Gibraltar unless permission is obtained from the port authority for this transport.

According to online tracking, the aircraft carrier is currently located off the coast of Morocco, near Casablanca on its way to the Strait of Gibraltar at the entrance to the Mediterranean Sea. It is not known what the route of the ship will be after the decision.

The ship, named Nae Sao Poulo, to which the people of Izmir reacted, started on 4 August from Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro Port and proceeded towards Aliağa, the place where the ship was planned to be dismantled. While the ship was continuing its voyage, many circles, democratic groups, professional organizations, as well as political parties and municipalities in İzmir took a series of actions. After the demonstrations, marches and concerts, the government had to step back.

On August 26, Minister of Environment, Urbanization and Climate Change Murat Kurum announced that a dangerous inventory report was requested for the ship but no response was given and that the conditional dismantling permit was canceled and the ship would not be allowed to enter Turkish territorial waters. Despite the cancellation of the permission, it turned out that SÖK Shipping, which will carry out the dismantling of the ship, did not give the order to stop the ship and only decided to slow down the ship.

Following the developments, the Brazilian Ministry of Environment (IMABA) suspended the export permit of the ship. The Ministry wrote a letter to Ocean Prime, the partner of SÖK Shipping, which handles the import business. The letter called for an immediate return to Brazil, accusing the ship of sailing in illegal traffic. While the route of the ship, which was towed and brought to Turkey by the Alp Center ship, does not change, it continues towards the Strait of Gibraltar.

Experts state that one of the places where the ship can go if international law is applied is Motitania. In Noadibou, the country’s second largest city and also its economic capital, more than 100 abandoned shipwrecks are waiting to be removed off the coast of the White Cape. In the country rich in fish reserves, iron pile shipwrecks pose a danger to the marine ecosystem.

Experts state that there is an excessive amount of polychlorinated biphenyl toxic substance in the region, which is harmful to human health in the long term and whose use is prohibited according to the 2001 Stockholm Treaty. It is stated that the reason for this is the ships buried in deep waters and on the surface and left to rot.

After the nationalization of the fishing industry in the 1980s, the coastline, full of abandoned ships because it was uneconomical, almost resembles a large ship graveyard. Later, it is stated that the situation got out of control after the local rulers of the time allowed out-of-date ships to be abandoned here as well. The European Union Commission has allocated a budget of 28 million euros for the removal of the ships.

Source: https://www.news2sea.com/ship-with-asbestos-blocked-from-entering-gibraltar/

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


General cargo ship BRIZA suffered mechanical failure while transiting Bosphorus in northern direction and had to anchor in emergency at around 0230 LT (UTC +8) Sep 3, in Kandilli area. Istanbul Ship Traffic Control tugs responded, the ship started moving at around 0400 LT, understood attempting to complete transit, but at 0440 LT she turned back, and was taken (towed?) back to Marmara sea, anchored at Ahirkapi Anchorage at around 0620 LT Sep 3. The ship is ballasting to Chornomorsk, Ukraine.

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


German container shipper Hapag-Lloyd is spending billions on expanding and renewing its fleet and looking at investing in more port infrastructure to extend its edge in the post-COVID 19 world economy, chief executive Rolf Habben Jansen told Reuters.

The Hamburg-based company, the world’s fifth-biggest container line, is armed with a huge war chest after reporting record earnings during the coronavirus crisis, which dislodged shipping capacity, clogged up ports and drove up freight rates.

“We have currently ordered 22 ships, twelve of them with 24,000 TEU (20-foot equivalent units) and ten with 13,000 TEU,” the CEO said in an interview.

The new ships are worth around $3 billion and will add almost a quarter to the fleet in TEU terms, Habben Jansen said.

Just last week, the company also launched a fleet renewal program worth a treble digit million sum, covering more than 150 ships, or nearly two thirds of its fleet, while it is eyeing port terminal investments over the next year.

“It would be logical to invest in port terminal infrastructure at locations where we are already strong,” Habben Jansen said, suggesting Europe but adding that North or South America were potential sites.

“I would be surprised if there wasn’t an investment in the terminal area within the next 12 months,” he said.

Recent purchases of stakes in port hubs include Damietta in Egypt, Tanger in North Morocco and JadeWeserPort in Wilhelmshaven.

The CEO stuck by the company’s raised forecasts for full-year 2022 earnings, saying that lower freight rate income and higher energy prices would affect earnings in six or nine months.

“It is true that we are paying significantly more for fuels but there are also first signs that prices of some commodities are falling again,” Habben Jansen said, referring to inflationary pressures.

Turning to capacity, Habben Jansen said that an order book worth 28% of total fleet volumes was excessive.

The overcapacity of the past decade, reaching 60% in some instances, was unlikely to return given stricter environmental rules, binding capacity and mandating slower travelling time, he added.

Source: https://www.maritimeprofessional.com/news/hapag-lloyd-spending-money-fleet-379157

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


China’s index of export container transport declined in the week ending Friday, according to the Shanghai Shipping Exchange.

The average China Containerized Freight Index (CCFI) went down 2.5 percent to 2,830.11 from the previous week, according to the exchange.

The sub-index for the Persian Gulf/Red Sea service led the decrease with a week-on-week drop of 6.7 percent.

Bucking the trend, the sub-reading for the South Africa service rose 1 percent from a week earlier.

The CCFI tracks spot and contractual freight rates from Chinese container ports for 12 shipping routes across the globe, based on data from 22 international carriers.

The index was set at 1,000 on Jan. 1, 1998.
Source: Xinhua

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


The UN secretary general called it “an agreement for the world”.

Speaking in Istanbul on 22 July, Antonio Guterres said the Black Sea Grain Initiative would bring relief for “the most vulnerable people on the edge of famine”.

The deal – agreed with Russia and Ukraine last month – allowed ships carrying much-needed Ukrainian food products to leave the country’s Black Sea ports for the first time since the war began.

A month later, more than 50 ships have so far braved the risks and departed Ukraine – helping to export over 1.2 million tonnes of grain and other foodstuffs.

The war which rages close by has so far failed to intrude and more and more ships are joining in.

But where is all the food going?

A deal which the UN argued forcefully was needed to prevent millions of people from going hungry has so far seen only modest humanitarian benefits.

The first ship carrying food aid on behalf of the World Food Programme (WFP) has only just arrived at its destination.

The bulk carrier Brave Commander is carrying 23,000 tonnes of wheat intended for vulnerable communities in southern Ethiopia. It left the Ukrainian port of Pivdennyi on 16 August and has just berthed in Djibouti.

The WFP has a second ship, the MV Karteria, loaded and ready to carry 37,500 tonnes of wheat to Yemen, where it is badly needed.

Officials at the agency say they hope other shipments will follow.

But these are tiny quantities. In 2021, WFP distributed 4.4 million tonnes of food aid around the world. Two thirds of it came from Ukraine.

How much grain is being shipped from Ukraine?

First grain ship leaves Ukraine under Russia deal

UN officials recognise that these are modest beginnings, but insist that the wider picture is important.

“You’ve got to separate what we’re doing from the overall opening up of the ports and the flooding of the market with this extraordinary amount of grain,” says Greg Barrow, senior spokesman for the UN’s World Food Programme.

The reappearance of Ukrainian grain on the international market has certainly brought relief around the world.

“It’s good news for Irish agriculture,” says John Bergin, Commercial Director of R&H Hall, Ireland’s leading importer of grain for animal feed.

The Navi Star, which recently arrived at Foynes on the west coast of Ireland laden with 33,000 tonnes of corn, was a welcome sight.

The ship was being loaded on 24 February, the day Russia’s invasion began.

“There was 28,000 tonnes on that ship the morning the war started,” Mr Bergin recalls. “Our supplier never got the ship out. Then the port became mined and the whole thing got stuck.”

The war brought Ukraine’s peak export period, which runs from December to April, grinding to a halt. Grain prices, already driven high by the coronavirus pandemic and droughts elsewhere, shot up, but have recently come down again.

“Average export prices were around 30-40% higher before the conflict began,” says Alexander Karavaytsev, senior economist at the International Grain Council.

“Now they’re 8% higher, so prices have declined markedly.”

Some of the reduction in price is due to seasonal impacts, as harvests progress elsewhere in the northern hemisphere, but the psychological impact of unblocking one of the world’s major grain producers is important. “It brings some solidity back into the market,” Mr Bergin says.

As grain silos are emptied and previously trapped vessels are liberated, industry sources are daring to hope that better days are ahead.

“There is growing optimism that agriculture commodities will continue to flow,” says a spokesman for Viterra, a grain and oilseed exporter with a significant presence in Ukraine.

“We are seeing an increased willingness from vessel owners to enter Ukrainian ports, which will also grow if passage remains safe.”

But how big an “if” is that?

Despite the deal struck in Istanbul in July, freight costs are still almost double what they were before the war, reflecting a lingering nervousness about the potential dangers associated with sending vessels into a war zone.

That nervousness is likely to prevent Ukraine from hitting the targets it needs to generate badly-needed revenue for its battered economy.

“They want to hit 5 million tonnes a month,” says Bridget Diakun, Lloyd’s List data reporter. “It sounds ambitious.”

For now, it’s smaller shipping companies, many of them Turkish, which seem willing to take the risk, with many of the world’s big players still holding back.

“They just want to keep the safety of the vessel and the safety of the crew as their top priority,” says Nidaa Bakhsh, senior markets reporter at Lloyd’s List. “And they can’t guarantee that they will be safe.”

The clock is ticking. The agreement brokered by the UN and Turkey only runs for 120 days. It can be extended in mid-November, but only if Russia and Ukraine agree.

For the UN, which has set so much store behind the success of the deal, to have it stop after just four months would be disastrous. “The world is going to struggle if that market is closed off again,” says WFP’s Greg Barrow.

Grain deals are normally struck 18 months to two years ahead. With no-one able to predict the state of Ukraine’s economy in 2023-24, it’s going to take time before that level of confidence returns.

Finally, what ever happened to the Razoni, the first vessel to leave Ukraine, amid great fanfare, at the beginning of August?

The UN’s checklist still has TBD (“to be determined”) against the ship’s destination, an awkward admission that the 26,000 tonnes of corn on board never reached its intended port, Tripoli in Lebanon.

When the original buyer rejected the shipment, apparently citing quality concerns, the Razoni embarked on a circuitous voyage around the eastern Mediterranean, much of it with its transponder switched off, indicating a reluctance to be tracked.

It finally unloaded most of its cargo at the Syrian port of Tartus.

There’s nothing illegal about delivering food to Syria, or unusual about ships changing direction. But the Razoni’s secretive journey shows that in the complex world of grain trading, you can’t always be sure where individual cargoes eventually end up.

Source: BBC

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


  • Shipping executives and industry watchers say contract prices for 40-TEU containers are headed for a dip following the trend in spot prices, despite rates still creeping up on some routes
  • Drewry’s WCI composite index says spot prices fell for the 27th consecutive week particularly on the Shanghai-Los Angeles corridor, indicating weak US demand
  • Xeneta and CMA CGM chief executives say long-term rates are now under pressure from slowing demand in the West due to inflation

Long-term container rates have begun dropping, as they track the direction of global spot rates for 40-foot boxes, according to a shipping executive and industry watchers, as soft demand due to high inflation in the United States and Europe is putting pressure on box prices.

Drewry Supply Chain Advisors said on September 1 its World Container Index composite index declined 5% from a week ago to US$5,661.69 per forty-foot equivalent units (FEU), its 27th consecutive week of contraction. The index has dropped 43% from a year ago.

Data from online platform Xeneta shows that long-term rates for FEU containers rose 4.1% in August, taking rates 121.2% higher year on year on August 31, but shipping executives admit rates are reversing.

“[D]espite softening spot rates, uneven demand and ongoing supply chain issues, the world’s leading carriers remain on course for another bumper year of profits,” an update from Oslo-based Xeneta was quoted by Splash as saying.

Signs are appearing that new long-term contracted rates, which have trended upwards since the disruptions and port congestions began in the 2021 peak season, are actually starting to drop on key trading corridors.

Xeneta said, however, since carriers are replacing expiring contracts with considerably lower rates, the average paid by all shippers is still climbing.

“There’s no doubt the major carriers have had it their way in negotiations for some time,” said Xeneta chief executive Patrik Berglund.

“The spectacular results they saw in 2021 will no doubt be repeated, and even bettered, this year, as seen by the huge profits that defined many Q2 financial reports. But there is a sense that change is in the air.”

After a long spell of container rates rising to abnormally high levels that drove up liner profits to record highs lately, rates are now expected to inevitably go the direction of declining spot markets. Liner top executives agree.

“What we’ve been seeing now for many weeks is a decrease of freight rates in almost all sectors. We expect that decrease to continue. I don’t think we’ll see a strong drop but rather a soft landing,” CMA CGM chairman and CEO Rodolphe Saadé told Bloomberg a week ago.

Saadé reiterated that view in CMA CGM’s results briefing on September 2. He said inflationary pressures have caused a slowdown in consumer spending and therefore a softening in demand for maritime shipping in recent weeks.

“In some regions, these developments have led to a decline in spot freight rates,” Saade  said. His view was echoed by Berglund.

“Volumes are dropping and, as expected, long-term rates are beginning to follow the trend set by the spot market,” the Xeneta CEO said.

A slowdown is expected in China’s exports to the United States and Europe this peak season as its manufacturing sector has been affected by anti-pandemic restrictions and industries face water shortage due to drought.

A lockdown in Chengdu city was imposed on September 1 on its 21 million population after 157 new COVID-19 cases were detected, raising  the number of infections to over 600. Observers said the lockdown could affect its export industries icluding electronics, information technology, food processing, machinery and automobiles, as happened in Shanghai earlier.

Drewry’s WCI composite index rate of $5,662 per FEU container is now 45% below the $10,377 peak in September 2021, but remains 55% above the $3,664 5-year average. The average WCI for the year to date is $7,928 per FEU , still $4,265 above the five-year average.

Spot rates on the Shanghai-Los Angeles route fell 9%, or $565, to $5,562 per FEU. Spot rates on Shanghai-Rotterdam and Shanghai-Genoa routes fell 5% each to $7,583 and $7,971 per FEU.

Shanghai-New York rates decreased 3%, or $265, to $9,304 per FEU. Similarly, Rotterdam-New York rates eased 1% to $6,839 per FEU.

Los Angeles-Shanghai rates gained 1% to $1,262 per FEU box, while Rotterdam-Shanghai and New York-Rotterdam rates hovered around the previous week’s level.

Source: https://www.portcalls.com/long-term-container-rates-track-spot-market-dip/

 

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


Kongsberg Maritime wins tender to deliver technology solutions and azimuthing thrusters for two innovative new offshore windfarm CSOVs. KONGSBERG has secured an approx. NOK 64M contract with Norwegian vessel operator Olympic to equip two new Construction Service Operation Vessels with an appropriately innovative technology suite.

Two KONGSBERG US 205 PM L FP L-drive azimuthing thrusters will be situated fore and aft in the TWIN X-STERN double-ended hybrid-powered vessels.

The KONGSBERG US thruster family has set the industry standards for decades being one of the company’s all-time best selling propulsion products. The range has been constantly evolved and upgraded over that time and the recently introduced PM model offers significant energy savings thanks to its vertically orientated permanent magnet motor mounted directly above the thruster.

KONGSBERG’s integrated technology solution will be integral to the vessel’s operational effectiveness. The suite will include dynamic positioning, navigation, thruster control and information management systems, all enhanced by inbuilt measures to improve efficiency and safety.

Central to the solution is KONGSBERG’s Integrated Vessel Control System. This integrates K-Pos – Dynamic Positioning System, K-Thrust – Thruster Control System and K-Bridge, operating on the vessels’ intuitive K-Master Integrated Workstation Consoles.

The vessels will be owned and operated by Norway-based Olympic, which has operated a specialist fleet in the subsea service and renewable energy markets since 1996. The project marks an important milestone in the development of the Norwegian Maritime Cluster, with Olympic, Ulstein Design & Solutions AS, Ulstein Verft and KONGSBERG all bringing their unique world-leading, but Norwegian-grown expertise and capabilities to the vessels.

“It’s a real honour for KONGSBERG to play such an important role in leveraging the benefits that these vessels will bring to the offshore wind industry. The vessel design is a great fit with the integrated solution from Kongsberg Maritime. The four identical US thrusters with our advanced Windfarm DP functionality, enable high speed manouvering in both forward and aft direction. This will reduce the time- and energy needed for transit between turbines.”Bård Bjørløw, EVP Global Sales and Marketing, Kongsberg Maritime

“We are very pleased to continue our cooperation with Kongsberg Maritime,” says Runar Stave, Chief Technical Officer, Olympic. “We have a tradition of innovating with KONGSBERG and these vessels represent the next generation in CSOVs. They are the result of a unique Norwegian maritime cluster, where our extensive offshore wind experience has combined with top tier ship design and world-class equipment, all brought together by one of the world’s leading builders of such vessels.”

Source: https://www.maritimeeconomy.com

 

 

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


As of the first quarter of 2022, the Paris MoU 3-years rolling Port State Control inspections record of Almi Tankers is flawless. All PARIS MoU Port State Control inspections on board our fleet from European and other MoU ports have been completed with zero (0) deficiencies.

It is worth pointing out that during the same period, for tanker vessels only, 3353 Paris MoU inspections were conducted which resulted in 4060 deficiencies, indicating an average of 1.2 deficiencies per inspection.

During the past decade, Almi Tankers achieved an average of 0.02 deficiencies per inspection, compared with 2.44 for the industry.

Paris MoU is an organisation that consists of twenty-seven (27) participating maritime Administrations and covers the waters of the European coastal States and the North Atlantic basin from North America to Europe. Annually more than 17,000 inspections take place on board foreign ships in the Paris MoU ports by the organisation, with the aim to ensure that these ships meet international safety, security, and environmental standards, and that the crew members have adequate living and working conditions.

Almi Tankers S.A. has defined and monitors several KPIs that reflect the company’s progress towards its Health, Safety, Environmental and Quality goals. The outcome of these KPIs is calculated at the end of each quarter and presented at the Management Review Meeting as well as on our webpage.

Source: https://www.maritimeeconomy.com/post-details.php?post_id=aGprZQ==&post_name=Almi%20Tankers%20achieves%203Year%20Flawless%20Paris%20MoU%20Performance&segment_name=16

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


Pasha Hawaii marks historic milestone as MV George III, the first LNG-powered containership to call the Bay Area, arrives at the Port of Oakland.

Oakland, Calif. : Pasha Hawaii and the Port of Oakland today announced the inaugural call of the MV George III to the Oakland Seaport, the gateway for containerized ocean cargo shipments in Northern California. The George III is the first Liquefied Natural Gas (“LNG”) powered vessel to call Oakland. The 774-foot LNG-fueled containership was built in Brownsville, Texas by Keppel AmFELS, and is the first of two new ‘Ohana Class vessels to join Pasha Hawaii’s fleet, connecting the West Coast and Hawaii.

Pasha Hawaii brings its new, LNG-powered vessel to Port of Oakland; history in the making as this is the first LNG ship to call the US West Coast.

Pasha Hawaii is part of 75-year-old, third-generation, family-owned company The Pasha Group, whose roots were planted in the Bay Area in 1947. The MV George III, named after the late son of the company’s founder, honors his entrepreneurial spirit and commitment to community stewardship.

“My late father (George Pasha, III) and grandfather (George Pasha, II) would be incredibly proud to see the George III arrive in the Bay Area today. Her arrival signifies the positive impact and environmental strides this containership will make in our local communities,” said George Pasha, IV, President and CEO, Pasha Hawaii. “My father played an integral role in building our family business into the global transportation and logistics company that exists today. His legacy of innovation lives on with the introduction of this remarkable vessel and marks an important step towards the decarbonization of shipping in the West Coast/Hawaii trade lane.”

Operating on natural gas from day one, the new Jones Act vessel surpasses the International Maritime Organization (IMO) 2030 emission standards for ocean vessels, representing the most technologically advanced and environmentally friendly vessel to serve Hawaii. Energy efficiencies are also achieved with a state-of-the-art engine, an optimized hull form, and an underwater propulsion system with a high-efficiency rudder and propeller.

“We thank Pasha Hawaii for bringing the first LNG-powered containership to call the Port of Oakland,” said Port of Oakland Executive Director Danny Wan. “This visit by the MV George III supports the Port’s overall vision of a zero-emission seaport operation.”

Source: https://www.maritimeeconomy.com/post-details.php?post_id=aGprag==&post_name=MV%20George%20III%20the%20first%20LNGpowered%20containership%20to%20call%20the%20Bay%20Area%20arrives%20at%20the%20Port%20of%20Oakland&segment_name=23

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


Pilot boat with 5 people on board collided with breakwater at Kobe Port, Japan, at around 0300 Tokyo time Sep 4. 52-year old skipper of the boat, and 71-year old pilot, died in the collision, 3 crew were seriously injured.

Source: https://www.fleetmon.com/maritime-news/2022/39421/skipper-and-pilot-died-pilot-boat-collision-kobe-v/

 

CREWEXPRESS STCW REST HOURS SOFTWARE - Paris and Tokyo MoU have announced that they will jointly launch a new Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) from 1st September 2022 to 30th November 2022


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