The Coast Guard reopened the Mississippi River to all vessel traffic near Memphis Friday morning. The shutdown of a part of the waterway had disrupted shipments of corn, soybeans and other commodities, causing a backlog of more than 1,000 barges.

Traffic was stopped Tuesday after transportation officials found of a beam fracture in the Interstate 40 bridge (Hernando DeSoto Bridge) that connects Arkansas and Tennessee.

“Based on information provided to us by the Tennessee Department of Transportation, the Coast Guard has determined that transit under the I-40 bridge is safe for maritime traffic,” Coast Guard Capt. Ryan Rhodes, captain of the Port of Memphis, said in a news release Friday. “We appreciate the cooperative efforts of both the Tennessee and Arkansas departments of transportation, as well as maritime port partners, to ensure the safety of our waterway.”

The reopening will begin to ease a jam of 62 vessels, with a total of 1,058 barges that were waiting to pass through the closed area, according to the Coast Guard.

Almost all grain barges must pass under the de Soto bridge on their way to Gulf of Mexico export facilities near New Orleans after being loaded along the upper Mississippi, Ohio, Illinois and Missouri rivers.

The closure of the river to traffic for almost four days sent grain markets nosediving Thursday. Industry experts attribute at least a portion of the volatility to this supply chain disruption.

“We’ve got really tight supplies already. We got very strong demand,” Mike Steenhoek, executive director of the Soy Transportation Coalition, explained to FreightWaves. “Then, when all of a sudden you basically put a kink in the hose, you can no longer effectively meet demand. That’s going to have a depressive effect on the value of the commodities.”

Even though it could take at least two days for the backlog to clear, Steenhoek said it could have been worse. However, he believes there’s a lot of work to be done to improve the country’s bridges and hopefully reduce these disruptions.

“I routinely express how the United States can increasingly be described as a spending nation, not an investing nation. There is a big difference between the two,” Steenhoek added. “As we move forward, it is my hope that this situation will further galvanize efforts to produce a comprehensive infrastructure investment strategy that addresses the needs of both urban and rural America.”

During the course of their investigation, Arkansas Department of Transportation inspectors found earlier evidence of damage on the bridge. They are now investigating to see if the damage was noted in previous reports and what actions were taken. As of Friday afternoon, the de Soto bridge was still closed to vehicular traffic.

 

Source: freightwaves


Shanghai Maritime Safety Agency has launched a 3-month Concentrated Inspection Campaign (CIC) on propulsion and auxiliary machinery, commencing from 15 March 2021 and ending on 15 June 2021.

Purpose of Concentrated Inspection Campaign

The main objectives of this CIC are to ensure that ships and shipping companies fulfill their non-delegable responsibility for the safety of operation, improve skills of master and crew of the ship for safety and emergency operation the steering gear, propulsion and auxiliary machinery and minimize the loss of lives and property arising from related accidents.

Shanghai MSA Guidance

Shanghai MSA made it clear that a ship which suffers a malfunction of forgoing machinery and poses a hazard to the safety of navigation will be subject to a thorough administrative investigation as well as PSC/FSC inspection. It is advised that serious deficiencies will give rise to detention.

Port/Flag State Control Officers (PSCOs /FSCOs) will carry out detailed inspections to verify critical areas for the steering gear, main propulsion machinery, generator, the emergency source of electrical power and its alarm systems, crew familiarization and operational controls.

CIC Checklist

Unlike related CIC launched by several MOUs last year, PSCOs/FSCOs will not apply a questionnaire listing a number of items to be covered during the CIC, but instead they will use a Checklist (Appendix A) issued by MSA which will be helpful in understanding the scope of the CIC.

The listed items are not exhaustive and may be varied to take account of the circumstances of the particular ship or its operations. Experience suggests that when an incident in relation to propulsion and auxiliary machinery failure occurs, the ship will be subject to both investigation and PSC/FSC inspection and it is highly likely that detention is inevitable. Normally, the failure of machinery and proper operation alone at the incident time will only give rise to a request to rectify the deficiency before departure (inspection action code “17”) but a combination of deficiencies of a less serious nature may result in the detention of the ship.


Significant discoveries have been made off South Africa’s south-eastern coastline by Total and its investment partners. Drilling activity such as this could be the kickstart that makes South Africa’s oil and gas sector a major player in the African market.

In successive years, Total and its partners had great news: gas condensate was found in 2019 at a site called Brulpadda off the coast of Mossel Bay and in 2020, the nearby Luiperd prospect in Block 11B/12B delivered more good results.

The block, in the Outeniqua Basin 175 km off the southern coast, covers an area of about 19 000 km² in water depths of 200 to 1800 metres. The exploration was done by the semi-submersible rig Deepsea Stavanger, which journeyed twice from Norway to lead the exploration projects.

The two finds raise the odds of Total investing in what it calls a “world-class” offshore gas site. The drilling campaign employed 195 South Africans with specialist skills but the potential spinoff is enormous if the find leads to drilling and commercialisation.

The new CEO of Petroleum Agency SA, Dr Phindile Masangane, describes the prospect of regular drilling operations off the South African coast as, “A game-changer for South Africa’s upstream oil and gas industry.”

Natural gas lies also lies offshore to the west of South Africa in the Atlantic Ocean (Ibhubesi). Block 2A of the Ibhubesi gas field north-west of Saldanha is estimated to have reserves of 850-billion cubic feet of gas.

If Total goes ahead with further investments, the PetroSA GTL refinery at Mossel Bay (Mossgas) could be revived and the idea of creating a gas market in South Africa would get a massive boost and the country’s four Special Economic Zones (SEZs) at ports would become critical to its utilisation.

 

Source: southafricanbusiness


UAE-based rig operator Shelf Drilling has secured a three-year contract for the 1982-built Trident XII jackup rig with Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) in India.

The company said Wednesday the rig will operate in the Mumbai High, offshore India, with scheduled start-up in Q4 2021.

Shelf Drilling’s fleet data said the Trident XII has previously been on contract with ONGC from January 2018 until May this year.

 

Source: seafarerglobal


Shipping busts can be even more exciting than shipping booms. When spot rates crash, debt comes due, vessels are arrested, bankruptcies pile up and vultures swoop in.

But not all shipping collapses are so action-packed. Sometimes things never devolve into total crisis mode. Sometimes the market gets stuck in limbo — like tankers are now.

Tanker rates have wallowed at or near historic lows throughout 2021, weighed by oil inventory destocking, COVID-struck demand and a stubborn aversion to scrapping older ships. The market is “the worst this business has seen for more than 30 years,” conceded Svein Harfjeld, co-CEO of DHT (NYSE: DHT) on his company’s quarterly call on Wednesday.

According to Clarksons Platou Securities, pre-2015-built very large crude carriers (VLCCs, tankers that carry 2 million barrels of oil) and Suezmaxes (tankers that carry 1 million barrels) were both earning just $6,900 per day as of Thursday. Rates for pre-2015-built LR2 product tankers (with capacity of 80,000-119,000 deadweight tons) had collapsed to $5,600 per day, down 75% month on month.

Yet there has been no wave of distress tanker sales or bankruptcies, as seen in past slumps. Tanker owners in the current downcycle had pared their financial leverage over the past decade and refilled cash cushions on strong rates in late 2019 and early 2020.
No distress yet

“We’re not seeing a distress situation. That’s for sure,” said Euronav (NYSE: EURN) CEO Hugo de Stoop on Thursday’s quarterly call. “Let’s not forget we’re just a few months past one of the best years tanker shipping has ever gone through. You cannot go from that situation to a distress situation in a few months.”

This also limits the number of secondhand ship sales compared to past rate depressions. “We, together with other people, have picked up pretty much everything that there was to pick up in the market,” said De Stoop.

He explained, “Some people who are not distressed are interested in selling their vessels simply because they look at what they’ve earned and what the prospects are and there’s this unknown factor of when the market is going to return to better territory. And they just don’t want to guess. They prefer to take their profit and leave the market.

“The problem there is that the [ship] values are going up way ahead of earnings, so it’s difficult to meet the bid-offer spread on many of those assets,” said De Stoop.

According to Harfjeld, “Values, or at least sellers’ asking prices, have moved up a bit quicker than we had hoped, leaving us in a wait-and-see mode for now.”
Limited scrapping (so far)

In addition to distress sales, tanker rate slumps usually see accelerated vessel scrapping. The current cycle is different.

If rates are as low and steel prices are as high as they are now, owners of older tankers would normally sell their ships for scrap en masse. That, in turn, would help bring vessel supply and cargo demand back toward balance.

Executives of both DHT and Euronav maintained that scrapping is being held back by lucrative rates for older tankers carrying oil for Iran and Venezuela.

Harfjeld said, “A lot of the old fleet is today engaged in trades that are sensitive in nature — with the embargoed oil. They’re getting paid quite handsomely to freight that oil and the oil is discounted, so the economics work for both the seller and the buyer of oil. We think that if some of these sanctions are lifted, you would very likely get a more normalized pricing dynamic on the oil side and that means [shippers] could not afford to pay these fantastic rates the old ships need. That would certainly leave these old ships without employment to a large degree, and then the option would be to start to scrap.”

Brian Gallagher, head of investor relations at Euronav, cited data showing that up to 54 VLCCs and 20 Suezmaxes are involved in Iranian trade, and 8% of the world’s VLCCs and 5% of Suezmaxes in the Venezuela trade.

Gallagher said the tankers in what he called the “illicit trade” all tend to be at least 17 years old, with little or no insurance or vetting, and have been sold from “reputable owners” to “private hands” since 2019. If these trades were “legitimized” through removal of sanctions, “a lucrative trade today would disappear tomorrow … and given high scrap prices, it’s a natural assumption that they would disappear.”
Container orders will block tanker orders

The low orderbook is one of the optimism drivers for tanker trades in 2022-23. Tanker tonnage on order is just 9% of the tonnage on the water.

Tanker rate recoveries precipitated a surge in new orders in past cycles. Assuming tanker demand recovers from COVID in 2H 2021 and 2022 (which remains hypothetical), this cycle should look different. Yard slots are filling up with orders for new container ships as that market booms. This will sharply limit ability to place future tanker orders.

According to De Stoop, “Only a handful of yards can build VLCCs and those are the same yards that build container ships and gas carriers. With profitability surging, we’ve seen the container segment order more than 10% of the world fleet [tonnage] in the last five months. That’s very impressive. That means the yards you would order VLCCs from are extremely busy.

“Also, we’ve already seen the first wave of LNG [liquefied natural gas] carrier orders and there’s another wave coming. Especially the Qataris, who are going ahead with the idea of building 50 option 50 [50 firm orders plus 50 options]. You can understand what that does to the orderbooks of the yards.

“But let’s not forget that yards need to retain the capability of building different types of vessels. If you have no tankers in your orderbook, you lose your know-how and some of the workers will leave. So, they will always have some slots available for building tankers.

“I’m not saying that the orderbook is full off container ships through 2025 so therefore it’s full for everybody. That’s wrong. But the number of tankers you can build [will go down]. I’m not saying you’re not going to see orders placed [for tankers] for late 2023 or 2024 for delivery. But I am saying that the capacity to overbuild is very much impaired because they’re receiving so many orders — and will likely be receiving many more orders — for the container and LNG sectors.”
Tanker earnings roundup

On Wednesday, VLCC owner DHT reported net income of $11.6 million for Q1 2021, down from $72.2 million in Q1 2020. Earnings per share of 5 cents came in above the consensus forecast for 3 cents. Of all the tanker companies, DHT had the most time-charter protection from depressed spot rates. Harfjeld stressed on the call, “You should not expect us to contract newbuildings.”

On Thursday, VLCC and Suezmax owner Euronav reported a net loss of $71 million for Q1 2021 compared to net income of $225.6 million in Q1 2020. The loss per share of 36 cents matched the consensus forecast.

Last month, Euronav ordered two VLCC newbuildings (with an option for a third) for deliveries in Q4 2022 through Q2 2023. It acquired two Suezmax resales in February for deliveries in January 2022.

Also on Thursday, crude and product tanker owner International Seaways (NYSE: INSW) — which recently announced a merger agreement with Diamond S Shipping (NYSE: DSSI) — reported a net loss of $13.4 million for Q1 2021 versus net income of $33 million in the same period last year. The loss per share of 48 cents was significantly better than the consensus forecast for a loss of 62 cents.

 

Source: hellenicshippingnews


Wreck removal personnel have begun cutting another section from the Golden Ray car carrier wreck in St Simons Sound, Georgia, in what is the longest-running wreck removal projects in the US. They are attempting to separate section three from the remainder of the wreck. Once separated, this section will be stowed in a drydock and transported to a facility at Mayors Point Terminal.

Collected data from fixed monitors and hydrographic surveys confirms the remaining wreck is stable, said Unified Command of the project. Responders removed 77 vehicles and 2 moveable decks from section six during weight-shedding operations.

They are using floating heavy-lift unit VB-10000 and chains for cutting and lifting operations. Once sections are removed, they are lifted on to drydock barges and towed to a recycling centre in Louisiana by tugs, including Kurt Crosby. Unified Command has deployed pollution control booms around the wreck removal project and regularly uses a flotilla of vessels to remove oil sheens within the safety area.

In the UK, the Maritime Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) has contracted a salvage company to remove a fishing vessel wreck. MAIB wants Nicola Faith to be raised using a barge crane to enable investigators to examine the wreck. The MAIB has already located the wreck and gathered and analysed dive survey data from the vessel.

“We now intend to raise the vessel so that an indepth examination and stability analysis can be carried out,” said MAIB. “The operation will be undertaken when weather and tidal conditions are suitable. It will then be taken ashore to a secure location for further examination before being prepared for a stability assessment.”

Also in the UK, crew on a Royal Fleet Auxiliary vessel had to tackle an onboard fire. This broke out on 1994-commissioned supply tanker RFA Fort Victoria on 10 May as it was berthed in Portland, UK. Fire-fighting teams from neighbouring areas responded. When they arrived, the fire was extinguished, but medics treated four injured crew.

In the Netherlands, general cargo ship Nordersand and inland cargo vessel Bacchus collided on 11 May in the Outer Maas in the Barendrecht area of Rotterdam. Bacchus was going from Dordrecht to Barendrecht and Nordersand was sailing from Rotterdam to Moerdijk port.

Their collision caused severe damage to Bacchus and it was towed to Europort for inspection and repair. Nordersand was grounded and suffered a long starboard hull breach above the waterline. Tugs helped to refloat the damaged vessel and moved it to Rotterdam, according to Fleetmon.

In Turkey, a salvage tug responded to a bulk carrier that suffered engine failure in the Marmara Sea. Bulker Sea Hope lost manoeuvring control south of Sivri Ada island and Istanbul on 13 May. It was towed to Ahirkapi anchorage for safety.

In Greece, general cargo ship Moseldijk, with 4,250 tonnes of fertilisers on board, ran aground as it approached Stilida port. It was refloated and moved to its berth in the port with no major damage reported.

 

Source: rivieramm


TSUNEISHI SHIPBUILDING of Japan is the latest company to be confirmed as implementing shipbaord data collection operations using the IoS-OP (internet of Ships open Platform) framework, for a newbuild bulk carrier currently under construction.

IoS-OP is an open platform that enables the sharing of vessel operations data among shipbuilders, manufacturers, and related service providers based on a set of data sharing rules agreed by all stakeholders.

TSUNEISHI will operate within this framework to collect actual operational data for the newbuild ship, so that the data collection infrastructure is integrated into the 82,000DWT bulk carrier’s operational systems from the sea trial stage.

The data to be collected includes draft and shaft horsepower, fuel consumption and power consumption from the main engine, generator, and auxiliary machinery, as well as information from the Voyage Data Recorder (VDR). In total, some 800 items will be included in the data collection process.

The collected data will be shared between the shipyard and shipowner through the ‘ShipDC Portal’, provided by ShipDC on behalf of the IoS-OP, and will be utilised for the development of new ship types based on an enhanced understanding of machinery condition and evaluation of the ship’s performance.

 

Source: smartmaritimenetwork


Clean Cargo is a business-to-business leadership initiative founded in 2004 by BSR. BSR’s global membership network includes over 80 members across the shipping industry, all committed to reducing the environmental impact of global freight transportation and promoting responsible shipping.

Committed, innovative and visionary, Clean Cargo members have successfully reduced CO2 emissions per container carried by 9.6 percent between 2015 and 2018, and by 5.6 percent between 2018 and 2019.

We are looking forward to working with Moët Hennessy in our collaborative effort to decarbonize maritime transport. Together, we can send strong market signals which demonstrate the strategic value of sustainability within freight operations,” says Sarah Mouriño, BSR’s Director of Transport and Green Freight.

For the past five years, maritime transport at Moët Hennessy has accounted for 85% to 90% of its shipments and nearly a third of its total CO2 emissions (around 10% for road transportation and <1% for air transport). Although sea freight remains the mode of transport with the least environmental impact, it still contributes to global warming, as well as air and water pollution. Moët Hennessy and the Clean Cargo Working Group are actively committed to minimizing pollution, maximizing energy efficiency and protecting marine biodiversity.

“We are fortunate to export our products all over the world and have always made it a priority to do so in the most environmentally sound way possible. The fine-tuning of our supply chain has enabled us to have 87% of our shipments by sea freight as of 2020. The partnership with Clean Cargo demonstrates our commitment to further improve our shipping practices for more sustainable transport solutions.” Alain Doudard, Supply Chain Director, Moët Hennessy.

In addition to serving as a forum for discussion between members, Clean Cargo offers companies the opportunity to discover the latest innovations and best practices in maritime transport. State-of-the-art measurement tools are also available to monitor and control the environmental impact of sea freight.

“Thanks to the work of our teams over many years to promote maritime transport, we have kept CO2 emissions from the transport of our products under control. With this partnership, we will be able to better measure these CO2 emissions from one port to another and find solutions to further reduce our overall carbon footprint.” Sandrine Sommer, Chief Sustainability Officer, Moët Hennessy.

Through this new partnership, Moët Hennessy continues its commitment to the Living Soils Living Together program, in particular by taking further action for more sustainable transport.

 

Source: prnewswire


Marketing oil and gas all over the world at the right price means managing two important variables:

  • Financial markets and price risks linked to market volatility, which depend on a number of economic, geopolitical and even climate-related factors.
  • Arranging shipping from production areas to consumer hubs worldwide under optimal safety conditions and in a timely, cost-effective way.

To rise to these challenges, our trading & shipping teams around the world work in close collaboration with Total’s Upstream and Downstream business segments, forming a one-stop shop on oil and gas markets. This optimizes transactions and means that we are equipped to offer tailored solutions to a wide range of players, from producers, transporters and refiners to financial institutions and industrial firms.

We trade with an extensive global network of partners every day, affording us a highly diversified range of resources and supply sources to complement our production volumes. This maximizes the chances of selling both our own and our partner producers’ production while securing supply flows to our refineries and our distribution system.

 

Source: total


Around 100 Somali nationals jailed in Kenya for their alleged involvement in vessel hijacks could be repatriated to finish up their jail terms in their native country.

Somalia’s ambassador to Kenya, Ambassador Gamal Mohamed Hassan, last week visited the Shimo La Tewa prison in Mombasa with Kenyan government officials and the chief inspector of the country’s prisons, press reports say.

Some 92 Somali nationals convicted of piracy are being held at the prison and are demanding to be repatriated due to living conditions there. The officials met with the prisoners to assess their situations.

“We have asked the Kenyan government to hand over them to us and finish their terms in their homeland… We hope that the process and deal can be reached in the next coming two weeks,’’ Gamal said in an interview with the BBC Somali Service.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has already been consulted on the transfer of the pirates to Somalian prisons, such as the Garowe and Hargeisa detention facilities UNODC has founded in Puntland and Somaliland respectively, as part of the Piracy Prisoner Transfer Programme.

Over 1,000 Somali pirates are in prisons around the world. Some have been already convicted while others are awaiting prosecution.

Source: splash247

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