The shipping industry has long known about the dangers of parametric rolling with researchers working to expand the understanding of the phenomenon that has increasingly become linked with damage to containers and car carriers. Now a Danish company that manufactures a broad range of sensors reports it has developed and tested a system on containerships that can alert crews to the danger or even automatically adjust a ship’s course before it begins the rolling phenomenon.

The hull forms of modern containerships and car carriers are believed to make them especially susceptible to parametric rolling. In the worst cases, during a series of uncontrollable movements, ships have reported that they heel up to 46 degrees in a very short time. Investigators have long believed that these incidents, which often come up quickly and without warning have contributed to container stack collapse and the loss of containers overboard such as the recent incidents with the ONE Apus, APL England, and several Maersk ships.

A current three-year study being undertaken by the container shipping sector has already identified that parametric rolling in following seas is especially hazardous for container vessels. The project is conducting testing and measurements to further identify the causes and how they can be addressed but so far has largely only been able to provide mariners with a few warnings and general instructions.

Danish company, Kjærulf Pedersen, which manufactures and develops sensors for measuring temperature, humidity, CO2, and O2, now reports it has developed a sensor system that can recognize the tendencies that lead to parametric rolling and send a message to the ship’s control system so the
system and crew have time to change course.

“Parametric roll can occur in just eight wave cycles, each lasting four to five seconds, and from roll to roll, the heeling may be doubled. It is impossible to detect, because it goes very quickly, and the situation is incredibly dangerous for everyone,” says Ole Egelykke-Milandt, sales engineer and project manager at Kjærulf Pedersen.

On the other hand, Egelykke-Milandt notes that it only requires that the course be changed slightly for the ship’s movements to slow down again.

The company’s system is based on three sensors, placed at the bow, amidship, and stern. All the ship’s movements are monitored in real-time up to 100 times a second. The system compares the observations with data on the ship’s speed, acceleration, and direction. The sensors detect if the movements are approaching a state that can become uncontrollable, and notifies the ship’s control system so that the course can be changed and the uncontrollable tilts are avoided.

Since January, the system has been installed on four large container ships that sail between China and the US, and the company reports its tests with Maersk have shown that the system is successful in recognizing the warning signs for parametric rolling. Kjærulf Pedersen reports that the system is now being implemented on the shipping company’s container fleet.

“In the long term, the plan is for data from the ships to flow into a central location so that all the shipping company’s ships can have use of the collected data. In this way, we get an algorithm that gets better and better at predicting dangerous situations, thus increasing safety significantly,” says Egelykke-Milandt.

The large amount of data from the sensors will also be used for other improvements such as weight distribution and the ship’s trim in the water.
Source: https://www.maritime-executive.com/article/sensor-company-builds-system-to-warn-of-parametric-rolling-danger

 

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


Methanol is continuing to gain momentum as a leading option for the shipping industry to address decarbonization. Already adopted by an emerging group of shipping lines, two of China’s leading shipping companies are joining the effort focusing on methanol for their future fuel choice.

During a meeting discussing the industry’s energy transition, the chairmen of China Merchants and COSCO Shipping Bulk announced that their companies will focus on Methanol marine fuel as their primary area of research in the future. CMES chairman Xie Chunlin and Gu Jinsong, Chairman of COSCO Shipping Bulk made the comments in a meeting held in late August according to the Methanol Institute, during which the two reviewed the cooperation between their companies and exchanged views on the shipping industry’s low-carbon transformation.

The news that the Chinese companies plan to focus on methanol follows previously reported efforts by COSCO to develop shipping using the alternative fuel source. COSCO Shipping Energy Transportation and Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company (DSIC) reported in February that they had received design approval for China’s first domestic methanol dual-fuel VLCC. The design calls for a 310,000 dwt VLCCs equipped with two methanol fuel tanks with a total of 10,000 m³, which would give the vessel range of 2,3000 nautical miles.

Previously, several government ministries have referenced low carbon and renewable methanol development from green hydrogen and methanol-fueled vessels as key enablers for the country’s policies to decarbonize the shipping industry noted Kai Zhao, Chief China Representative for The Methanol Institute. “That places methanol at an entry point on the transition curve where two leading Chinese companies can reduce GHG emissions and achieve carbon neutrality in the longer term.”

The Methanol Institute welcomed the comments made by the chairmen of China Merchants Energy Shipping and COSCO Shipping Bulk supporting methanol noting it is part of a growing trend for the alternative fuel. The attention coming from the China Merchants Group they noted is especially encouraging as the company is the second largest among non-financial shipowners worldwide with its fleet and pending newbuild orders totaling 315 ships equivalent to 44.6m dwt. COSCO Shipping Bulk operates a fleet comprising some 400 bulk carriers, equivalent to nearly 40m dwt.

“China is already a leader in production of renewable energy and the shift towards methanol long term is in step with its decarbonization ambitions,” says Chris Chatterton, Chief Operating Officer, The Methanol Institute. “The shipping industry can’t wait for fuels that may be decades away from approval and availability; shipowners need a place to start in making carbon savings and Methanol can provide that transition now.”

They noted that in the past year that Maersk, CMA-CGM, and X-Press feeders each placed orders or increased their commitments for methanol newbuild vessels. Companies including Waterfront Shipping, Stena/Proman, NYK, and MOL have also built methanol carriers that use a segregated portion of the cargo as fuel.

With more bulk shipowners exploring methanol as fuel, the Institute also highlights that this year has seen methanol/dual-fuel designs for bulk carriers and tankers coming to market. Main engine makers report full order books for new units and increasing interest in retrofits and conversions of existing engines.

According to data from DNV’s Alternative Fuel Insight, today less than one percent of the worldwide shipping fleet operates on methanol. They report that there are currently 62 ships either in operation or on order that use methanol out of a worldwide fleet of nearly 6,800 ships. Methanol is currently used mostly by oil and chemical tankers although the new orders came from container shipping.
Source: https://www.maritime-executive.com/article/cosco-and-china-merchants-exploring-methanol-fueled-ships

 

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


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


Oil giant Shell has lost another round in its long-running battle over exploration rights along South Africa’s Wild Coast. The company was first awarded the exploration rights in 2014 but had only moved in 2021 to commence the exploration after the government agreed to renew the rights despite protests from environmentalists and local indigenous rights activists.

In a ruling on September 1, a South African court for a second time ordered Shell to halt the offshore exploration for oil and gas deposits. In a final decision revoking the exploration rights, a panel of three judges noted that the locals were not properly consulted on the project and denied the government’s right to extend the rights for the survey area. It confirmed a similar interim decision from last December.

The local community had taken the case to court seeking review of a decision by the Department of Mineral Resources allowing Shell to conduct Seismic surveys off the pristine Wild Coast. Late last year, Shell moved to begin the survey by hiring Shearwater GeoServices to conduct a 3D seismic survey over an area of more than 2,300 sq. miles beneath the Indian Ocean. The seismic surveys involve a ship towing high-volume air guns, which would blast low-frequency sounds at the seabed at regular intervals.

The survey project was due to run for four months but in December the same court issued an interim order prohibiting Shell from going ahead with its plans. After the court’s decision, Shell confirmed it had canceled the contract with Shearwater based on the court and the ongoing legal battle. The company said it was reviewing the judgment while continuing the legal fight.

The residents of the area argued in court that the decision-makers failed to consider the potential harm of the exploration to the fishers’ livelihood and the ocean life in general. South Africa’s Wild Coast is a 185-mile stretch of water hosting exquisite marine life and nature reserves.

Environmental activists also argued about the impact of the seismic surveys on marine life saying it far outweighs the potential economic benefits. They also cited the contribution of oil and gas companies to climate change.

“As wild coast people, we live off the land and the ocean. Government tells us that oil and gas will bring opportunities but we know very well that this will destroy our livelihoods. The ocean is our best defender against climate change, shielding us from its worst impacts. By helping the ocean, we help ourselves. Ocean action is climate action,” said Siyabonga Ndovela, Wild Coast resident.

Environmental campaigners lauded the judgment as a monumental history for fishermen and rural communities in Wild Coast as well as the marine life in the area.

With the final ruling from the Eastern Cape High Court, Shell now has an option to appeal the judgment at South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal.

“We remain committed to South Africa and our role in the just energy transition,” a spokesperson said in response to the court’s decision. The company also repeated its earlier statements, saying that it “respects the court’s decision” and is reviewing the judgment to determine the next steps.

Source: https://www.maritime-executive.com/article/south-african-court-issues-ruling-revoking-shell-s-exploration-rights

 

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 global shipping industry should brace for a widespread crisis that would result in a surge in operational costs, loss of ships, and delays if China actualizes its rhetoric and goes ahead to invade Taiwan, a new report suggests. At the same time, the report prepared by the Mercatus Center think tank at George Mason University, hypostatizes that China would cut undersea Internet cables vital to the semiconductor industry and providing a key link for data between Asia and North America.

As tension between China and Taiwan escalated in recent weeks, the report draws on Chinese data to illustrate the potential scenarios and impact on the global economy. The authors report that China’s People’s Liberation Army has prepared hundreds of scenarios as part of the country’s long-held ambitions of reunification.

If actualized, the invasion they conclude is bound to have significant trade and economic effects that could easily exceed those of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Pointing to the potential for the likely impact on container shipping, the report says that the U.S. economy would likely bear the biggest brunt due to its huge exposure to the economies of the two Asian countries not only in trade volumes but also in the share of value the two countries add in U.S. final demand.

The report contends that an outright invasion of Taiwan by China, a Taiwanese declaration of independence, or an accidental clash at sea between China and Taiwan or the U.S could lead to a crisis in the Taiwan Strait. The result they conclude would pose two immediate risks to the U.S. economy, first in the form of delays or disruption of container shipments in the Taiwan Strait, the South China Sea, and the East China Sea, as well as the potential disruptions to digital flows from vulnerable submarine cables with landing stations in Taiwan.

“The potential effects of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan on the U.S. economy are far greater than those of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Container shipments to and from major ports in the region, as well as digital flows, would be at direct risk,” writes senior research fellows Christine McDaniel and Weifeng Zhong at the Mercatus Center

According to the report, a Chinese invasion would significantly disrupt container shipping operations through the Taiwan Strait, one of the world’s busiest sea routes. They cite estimates showing that $3.4 trillion in trade passed through the South China Sea, or 21 percent of the global trade, using the Taiwan Strait as a vital route. The disruption could affect containerized shipments to or from major ports in China, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, Taiwan, and Vietnam. The report shows that one of the busiest shipping routes is in the Straits of Malacca, given that it is the shortest sea route between the Indian and Pacific oceans.

An invasion would lead to shipping routes that normally go through the Taiwan Strait being delayed, or force vessels to reroute. As was seen with bulkers and other shipping in the Black Sea, any form of hostilities would ignite a surge in insurance premiums. While rerouting to avoid the war-risk premium is possible, the authors note that it would result in additional costs and also lengthens shipping times. Costs of rerouting all traffic around the Straits of Malacca are estimated between $279 million per month (if rerouting through Indonesia) and $2.8 billion per month (if rerouting through Australia).

“Any geographic expansion of a crisis that begins in the Taiwan Strait would easily make rerouting harder, if not impossible,” notes the report.

Another impact would be substantial delays in supply chains, a development that would have ripple effects across various industries. In the U.S., for instance, most technology firms rely on Taiwanese manufacturers to produce up to 90 percent of semiconductor chips. Disruptions to the supply of the chips would disrupt entire value chain ecosystems for every industry that uses advanced computer chips.

Apart from disrupting the container shipping industry, China’s invasion of Taiwan has the potential to disrupt digital flows from vulnerable submarine cables with landing stations in Taiwan. As of August 2022, Taiwan was connected to 15 submarine cables that come to shore at landing stations in the city of New Taipei, the town of Toucheng in the north, and the town of Fangshan in the south. The landing stations connect high-capacity cables in which U.S technology companies have made significant investments.

The report concludes that economic risks underscore the need for the U.S to work with Taiwanese authorities and other Indo-Pacific allies and partners to improve the security of submarine cables and their landing stations. They also cite the need for contingency planning for container shipping traffic and essential intermediate inputs to U.S. production and value chains.

Source: https://www.maritime-executive.com/editorials/report-invasion-of-taiwan-risks-container-shipping-internet-cables

 

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


Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) announced, today, that its first shipment of low-carbon ammonia has left the United Arab Emirates (UAE) bound for Hamburg, Germany. This is the first ever cargo of low-carbon ammonia to be shipped to Germany.The demonstration cargo will be delivered to Aurubis, a leading global provider of non-ferrous metals and one of the largest copper recyclers worldwide, that has its headquarters in Hamburg. On arrival in Germany, Hamburger Hafen und Logistik AG (HHLA), one of Europe’s leading logistics companies will handle the cargo.

Produced by Fertiglobe, a partnership between ADNOC and OCI, at its Fertil plant in Abu Dhabi’s Ruwais industrial complex, the demonstration cargo is the first of several test cargoes sold to customers in Germany as ADNOC expands its strategic energy partnership across the hydrogen value chain. The cargo follows a number of similar low-carbon ammonia sales that have been made to customers in Asia. Aurubis plans to utilize the low-carbon ammonia as a feedstock in its wire rod plant, testing its application as an additional, lower-carbon energy source for industial ulilization. The hydrogen it contains has the potential to be a low-carbon energy alternative for the energy-intensive processes in multi-metal production.

This is another important milestone in the planned scale-up of hydrogen and low-carbon ammonia production capabilities in Abu Dhabi, where ADNOC is developing a new world-scale 1 million tons per annum low-carbon ammonia plant at TA’ZIZ, the chemicals, industrial services and logistics hub in the Ruwais Industrial Complex.

His Excellency Dr. Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and ADNOC Managing Director and Group CEO, said: “This demonstration cargo of low-carbon ammonia builds upon the longstanding bilateral relationship between the UAE and Germany and our growing partnership in clean energy. It highlights ADNOC’s expanding role as a trusted exporter of low-carbon fuels, as the UAE focuses on the industrial growth opportunities within the energy transition.

“Our collaboration with customers in Germany also underlines ADNOC’s ambitious growth plans for the production of clean hydrogen, and its carrier fuels such as ammonia, which will play a critical role in decarbonizing hard-to-abate industrial sectors. We are committed to accelerating and deepening private and public sector collaboration in clean hydrogen projects that will reduce carbon emissions and the carbon intensity of the energy that supports our everyday lives.”

Roland Harings, CEO of Aurubis, said: “As the most efficient and sustainable smelter network in the world, Aurubis provides metals that are key for megatrends such as renewable energies, electric mobility and digitalization and hence for decarbonization. To guarantee stable processes at our sites, we are expanding our portfolio of reliable energy sources and thus investing in the decarbonization of our production at the same time. This first trial shipment of low-carbon ammonia from ADNOC represents an important milestone in our long-term vision for hydrogen solutions that will help meet our decarbonization goals.”

Angela Titzrath, CEO of HHLA, said: “With its experience in port handling and logistic of containerized dangerous goods, its vast network of seaport terminals, hinterland connections and intermodal hubs across Europe, HHLA is pleased to facilitate the import of hydrogen and its derivates to Germany and Europe as part of the strategic energy partnership.”

H.E. Michael Westhagemann, Hamburg Senator for Economy and Innovation, said: “I very much welcome the fact that our international and national partners in business and the port are leading the way with these real-world trials for decarbonizing industry. We need these real-world findings and commitment to support the ramp-up of a Green Hydrogen Economy. Hamburg as an industrial location and as a European distribution port is a blueprint for this transformation and is therefore also in the German focus.”

During the visit of H.E. Dr. Robert Habeck, Germany’s Vice Chancellor and Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Action to the UAE in March 2021, ADNOC signed agreements with a number of German companies to explore opportunities for collaboration in low-carbon and renewable hydrogen derivatives.

Building on its position as an early mover in the production of hydrogen, ADNOC plans to significantly grow its hydrogen production in support of the UAE’s ambition to supply up to 25% of imported hydrogen in key global markets. Germany’s national hydrogen strategy expects an import demand for clean hydrogen of approximately 3 million tons per annum (mtpa) by 2030 and up to 15 mtpa by 2050 when, according to research from the Hydrogen Council, hydrogen could meet up to 18% of the world’s energy demand.

Low-carbon ammonia is the most promising at-scale hydrogen carrier and potential clean fuel for a wide range of applications, including transportation, power generation and industrial, including steel, cement, and fertilizer production. It is made from nitrogen and clean hydrogen derived from natural gas feedstocks, with the carbon dioxide by-product from hydrogen production captured and stored.

Source: https://adnoc.ae

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


In the second of a series of interviews ahead of the Saudi Maritime Forum, Baltic Exchange Chairman Denis Petropoulos, speaks about the outlook for shipping markets. “There is optimism for shipping over the next 12-to-24 months—although not consistent across all sectors,” he told Seatrade Maritime News.

“Baltic Exchange members represent an enormous cross-section of global shipping—owning, operating, chartering and broking—so every event affects our members.”

The exchange also provides the daily freight data the shipping industry requires to function.

The chairman, who took over in 2019, said that both dry and wet markets had been disrupted by ‘black swan events’ Covid-19 and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and that these difficulties were compounded by uncertainty around transitioning away from hydrocarbons and managing future emissions.

“This latter ‘disrupter’ has been a topic for the past three years. However, the Covid-19 pandemic created a significantly reduced need for bulk energy, which after two years is only now returning to previous demand,” he said.

During the pandemic, there was increased demand for manufactured goods through containerisation, and the construction industry continued to require the bulk commodities needed to produce steel, with both sectors enjoying higher freights. The Russian invasion of Ukraine had disrupted trade routes in medium-sized tankers and grain trades, which had led to sourcing commodities from further afield, adding tonne-miles to seaborne trade, a positive for industry economics.

“Covid-19 also caused congestion in ports, particularly in China, which is now easing, while dry markets are softer than they were at the end of last year,” he said.

“Energy markets, however, are strengthening as the supply of crucial fossil fuels, especially gas in Europe, needs to be secured for the winter months ahead.”

“The reduced supply of new vessel orders is very noticeable, particularly in tankers and, despite a complex chain of reasoning, this will filter through to increasing freight levels for vessels under 15 years old.”

Petropoulos said Saudi Arabia was an enormous supplier of crude oil, and, more recently, refined products and chemicals. While the world continued to research cleaner energy, with wind and solar seen as inexhaustible sources, transitioning to this point would likely exceed even the most liberal of estimates, as energy could not be ‘switched off’ at this or any time.

“Fossil fuels will always be required for the production of plastics, and, as long as they are shipped, our members are affected,” he said.

Commenting on the ‘wider’ Middle East region, he said this could feasibly include East Africa and Indian Ocean trade, where developed Middle East countries’ trading hubs were increasing their expertise to  specifically service these areas.

 

 

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


King Abdullah Port has recently launched the “MSC Indus 2”, provided by the leading global container shipping company, MSC, to help the port contribute to the development of the Kingdom’s booming export market, by facilitating trade between North America and the Indian subcontinent, which is one of the Kingdom’s major trading partners.

The port will provide highly efficient logistics services for containers transported on board MSC cargo ships arriving from the port of “Mundra”, which is the largest private container port in India to King Abdullah Port, through the shipping line linking India and the main ports in the Mediterranean with the United States. This service will also provide the necessary support for exporters to major European ports up to the port of “Halifax” in Canada, and then to the midwestern cities of the United States such as Chicago and Detroit.

CEO of King Abdullah Port Jay New said that this new achievement meets the objectives of the National Transport and Logistics Strategy, and contributes to the Kingdom’s Vision 2030, which is to consolidate the Kingdom’s position as a global logistics hub linking three continents.

He reiterated the port’s aspiration to start receiving shipments from the port of “Mundra” as the main container terminal in the Middle East and North Africa region of the Indus Shipping Lines 2 service, in line with the vision to be an efficient and sustainable global port that provides long-term value to partners.

Source: https://www.maritimeeconomy.com/post-details.php?post_id=aGlubA==&post_name=King%20Abdullah%20Port%20Launches%20Liner%20Service%20MSC%20Indus%202&segment_name=6

 

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


Long-term ocean freight rates climbed yet again in August, edging up 4.1% month-on-month to stand 121.2% higher than this time last year. The latest global data, crowd-sourced by Oslo-based Xeneta for its Xeneta Shipping Index (XSI®), demonstrates that, despite softening spot rates, uneven demand and ongoing supply chain issues, the world’s leading carriers remain on course for another bumper year of profits.

 

Over the top?
Xeneta’s benchmarking and market analytics platform, which aggregates data from leading global shippers and freight forwarders, shows that new long-term contracted rates are actually starting to drop on key trading corridors, following on the heels of declining spot prices. However, due to the fact they’re replacing expiring agreements with considerably lower rates, the average paid by all shippers is still climbing. The question is, for how long?

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

Uncertainty ahead
He continues: “Volumes are dropping and, as expected, long-term rates are beginning to follow the trend set by the spot market. When you add in an uncertain macroeconomic outlook, continuing supply chain issues – such as the industrial action we’ve seen occurring, or threatened, in major ports in Germany, UK, and the US – and disruption in China due to the zero-COVID policy, it’s an unpleasant cocktail for the industry to swallow.

“In addition, you also have problems seemingly exacerbated by climate change, with low water levels impacting both power and factory production, as well as hinterland logistics chains. How will this challenge the longer-term outlook for carriers that have begun to look ‘bulletproof’? The data will reveal all, so to get the best value in negotiations, stay tuned.”

Uniform trend
For the time being, however, the latest container rates intelligence follows a development path well-trodden over the last couple of years. According to the XSI®, all major indicators across all key routes are still resolutely pointing upwards.

In Europe, the import benchmark grew by 2% month-on-month, an 82.6% increase against August 2021. Exports were even stronger, climbing 7.3% from July. Exports out of the far East showed a 2.7% rise across August and have now rocketed by 90% this year alone. The curve in imports has not been so precipitous in 2022 (climbing by 40.4% this calendar year), but the last month saw a strong, 4.3% rates rise.

The US is an interesting market, states Berglund, as the shift in volumes from the West Coast to the East simply transfers an issue it was conceived to solve.

Difficult decisions
He explains: “Carriers and shippers looking to avoid West Coast port congestion moved East and, lo and behold, the congestion issues shifted coasts too. We now have a situation where schedule reliability is improving in the West, while container rates fall, whereas the opposite is true of the East. However, do stakeholders want to risk moving back West, especially when unresolved union talks may threaten any perceived benefits? It’ll be another case of watch this space.”

As far as August was concerned, both import and export indicators climbed for the region, with imports up 6% (a huge 183.2% year-on-year increase) and exports rising 7.1% (42.5% higher than August 2021).

Oslo-based Xeneta’s unique software platform compiles the latest ocean, and air freight rate data aggregated worldwide to deliver powerful market insights. Participating companies include ABB, Electrolux, Continental, Unilever, Nestle, L’Oréal, Thyssenkrupp, Volvo Group and John Deere, amongst others.
Source: Xeneta

 

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