Independent journal on economy and transport policy
04:01 GMT+2
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE STUDI CONTAINERS
ANNO XXXVIII - Numero MAGGIO 2020
REEFER
NOW PROFITABLE, ONE EXPANDS REEFER FLEET
"Singapore-based container carrier digs out from $586
million fiscal-year loss to report $105 million profit and procures
5,000 40-foot units"
Ocean Network Express (ONE), which last week announced it had
turned a profit, said Tuesday it was expanding its refrigerated
container fleet by 5,000 40-foot units.
Two hundred of those units will be equipped with advanced
controlled atmosphere technology, said Singapore-based ONE, which
said it already has one of the largest state-of-the-art reefer
fleets and procured 6,000 units last year.
Global refrigerated container volume grew by more than 7% in
2019, according to ONE, which said that despite challenges posed by
the coronavirus pandemic, the forecast for the global reefer trade
remains strong, especially for protein and fresh fruits.
ONE said it is working toward applying the latest internet of
things technology to its reefer fleet to allow for real-time
visibility of such critical information as temperature and humidity.
Last week ONE said it had achieved synergies of more than $1
billion since it began sailing in early 2018 through such means as
reduced overhead costs and network optimization. It became the
world's sixth-largest container carrier with the combination of
three Japanese ocean liner companies - Mitsui O.S.K. Lines (MOL),
Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha (NYK) and Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha ("K"
Line). ONE reported Thursday that it had turned a fiscal-year 2019
profit of $105 million and dug out from a fiscal-year loss of $586
million in 2018.
ONE's fiscal year runs from April 1 to March 31. In April 2019,
the company said it had experienced "teething problems" in
its first year of operations but that the loss was better than the
$594 million hole it had expected. At that time, ONE forecast
turning a fiscal-year 2019 profit of $85 million.
Revenue for the 2019 fiscal year grew by $985 million, from
$10.88 billion in 2018 to $11.86 billion, a 9.1% improvement.
The COVID-19 pandemic impacted post-Lunar New Year liftings more
than originally forecast. ONE said a crisis management committee was
set up in late January and a business continuity plan was activated
country by country to maintain ship operations and container flow.
More sailings also were canceled to meet declining cargo demand.
ONE said because of the pandemic, it cannot forecast the
full-year 2020 performance.
ONE's chief executive officer is Jeremy Nixon, who previously
was CEO of NYK Group South Asia's global liner management division.
Nixon, who left Maersk Line in 2008 to join NYK, was touted at the
time of his appointment to lead ONE in July 2017 as the
highest-ranking non-Japanese executive to ever serve at any of the
three carriers forming the joint venture.
ONE, a member of THE Alliance with HMM, Hapag-Lloyd and Yang
Ming, this week is deploying the Seaspan Oceania, a vessel with a
capacity of 8,468 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), on the North
Europe-Asia trade to retrieve empty containers. The Seaspan Oceania
was expected to start loading containers at the Port of Antwerp in
Belgium on Tuesday and then continue to the Port of Rotterdam.
Discharge of the containers at the Port of Yantian in China was
expected to take place in mid-June.
As of the end of March, ONE had a total fleet of 222 vessels
with a total capacity of 1,571,294 TEUs.
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