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Africa the big loser as global liner patterns shift to focus on more profitable east-west tradelanes

Africa is the big loser in the hugely reshaped global liner patterns over the course of the pandemic-strewn last year.

Carriers have moved to deploy far greater tonnage on the more profitable three main east-west tradelanes – Asia-Europe, transpacific and transatlantic – at the expense of more regional coverage.

New data from Alphaliner shows that capacity deployed on liner services to and from Africa is now 6.5% lower than one year ago. Mediterranean Shipping Co (MSC), for example, has shifted some 13,000 teu ships from African trading to the Pacific.

Other routes such as intra-Asia and to Oceania and Latin America are also seeing less coverage this year too, but nowhere has seen a greater drop in liner calls than the continent of Africa.

“The main reason why carriers have shifted a larger proportion of their fleets to the East-West trades is of course the high revenue that can be earned there,” Alphaliner observed in its most recent weekly report.

Alliances continuously shift capacities between tradelanes to adapt to changes in demand even if there are no real changes in demand

Several rate indexes have been underestimating spot rates on the transpacific as they did not include the premiums that shippers are willing to pay to secure a booking guarantee.

The Baltic Exchange has changed its calculating formula for the Freightos Baltic Index (FBX) after receiving reactions from the market that the index did not reflect real figures. As a result, the rate index jumped to $13,666 for China – US west coast shipments, up 108% week-on-week. Average China – US east coast rates stand now at $16,008 per feu.

Alphaliner data shows that the routes between Asia and North America have attracted the most extra tonnage over the last few months. Nowadays, 19.9% of the cellular fleet – equivalent to 4.87m teu – is deployed on the transpacific, which is a huge increase of 30.6% year-on-year.

This impressive capacity growth does not match actual cargo growth however. Carriers simply need much more tonnage as ships get stuck in congested ports in both the US and Asia. Some carriers reported that they needed at least 20 to 25% more fleet capacity to continue carrying the same amount of cargo.

There has also been a substantial increase in so-called ‘extra sailers’, of which Alphaliner currently counts more than 30 ships between Asia and the west coast of North America alone.

Also crunching the numbers on carrier deployment to battle vessel delays, Denmark’s Sea-Intelligence noted over the weekend that since the start of 2021, carriers on the transpacific have had to deploy more than 20% more nominal capacity than usual, simply to offer the same weekly capacity.

Actual cargo-carrying capacity, when compensated for the delay-effect, whether compared to 2020 or pre-pandemic 2019, on both the transpacific and Asia-Europe turns out to be negative, analysts at Sea-Intelligence have worked out when looking at the cargo-carrying capacity on a roundtrip-basis measured in teu*days.

Carriers on the transpacific report that they need 25% more fleet capacity to continue carrying the same amount of cargo

Commenting on Africa’s sudden drop in global maritime connectivity, Jan Hoffmann, head of the trade logistics branch at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), told Splash: “Unlike the United States, African countries could not create significant economic stimulus packages, and their vaccinations rates are far lower than in North America. So the lower fleet deployment to African routes is a response of these two sides of the Covid pandemic. There is less demand, and the hinterland logistics system is even more strained than in the US.”

Hoffman said today’s liner situation without any idle capacity meant fleet deployment has become a zero-sum game.

“When there is a shortage of containers or ships resulting from congestion in Los Angeles or a stuck container ship in Suez, freight rates go up globally,” he pointed out, going on to observe how importers in Western Africa and South America often have to pay twice for their container: the journey of the full container from Shanghai to Santos or Lagos, and then the return journey of the mostly empty container.

Olaf Merk, project manager for ports and shipping at the International Transport Forum (ITF) of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), questioned whether regulators ought to be looking into this shift in global coverage as well as the host of other issues carriers are accused of in recent months.

“This seems to have become the current reality of global liner shipping: alliances and consortia continuously shift capacities between tradelanes to adapt to changes in demand even if there are no real changes in demand,” Merk said, adding: “And so it can happen that shippers in one continent suddenly have less capacity to their disposal due to a capacity shift to other parts of the world, even if they need more capacity. This dynamic – often coordinated via alliances and consortia – obviously can have impacts on freight rates.”

Merk concluded by musing: “One wonders to what extent competition authorities take this into account when providing their legal privileges to alliances?”

Kris Kosmala, a partner at supply chain advisory Click & Connect, said the latest Alphaliner stats did not look good for African importers and exporters.

“Unfortunately, the carriers may be responding in pursuit of profits and turn to the lanes that are not only much more profitable for them, but also where the ports are the most efficient in moving the cargo through,” Kosmala suggested.

African container ports fared very poorly in a recent global port productivity survey carried by the World Bank and IHS Markit.

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Africa the big loser as global liner patterns shift to focus on more profitable east-west tradelanes