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10 July 2026 - Year XXX
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FORUM of Shipping
and Logistics


The Shipbuilding Market in 1998


Analysis by country

Japan

Kentaro Aikawa, President of the Shipbuilders Association, said in September 1998: "the Japanese shipyards have enough contracts to be fully occupied during the next two years, and they have no need to run all over the world looking for new orders". 

This statement sums up well enough the record figure of 20.1 million gt reached by the Japanese yards in the third quarter of 1998, maintaining their market share. It also shows their extraordinary reactivity in the face of their Korean rivals, which benefited from an unprecedented competitive devaluation. 

It is true that the financial crisis that forced Korea to seek help from the IMF in the fourth quarter of 1997 might initially have been of benefit to the Japanese yards. Shipowners naturally turned to them, given legitimate queries about the survival of the Korean yards and above all their temporary inability to conclude orders because of the failure of the banking system. 

The Japanese yards were also able to benefit from the gradual depreciation of the yen against the dollar, from 120-125 yen/$ at the beginning of the year to 140-145 yen/$ in September 1998. This devaluation also caused positioning by shipowners anticipating a still weaker yen. However, this trend stopped on 8 October, when the yen appreciated suddenly and unexpectedly from 140 to slightly above 111 yen/$. 

Of course the situation is not uniform, and affects small and medium-size yards differently. In April 1998 the Japanese government invited the large yards to help the small yards by sub-contracting jobs to them wherever possible. 

The output of many of them is acquired by domestic shipowners, whose investment capacity remains conditional on obtaining bank loans; the difficulties that the Japanese banks are encountering in turn is leading to credit restrictions and complicates loan syndication. 

Furthermore, many small Japanese shipowners customarily order against long-term charter parties, mainly from first-rank Japanese shipowners or from Western companies. The uncertainty, the reduction in growth and the contraction of international trade have reduced transport needs, leading to a fall in freight rates which again compromises investment options. Some orders have had to be cancelled. Confronted with this situation, the small yards have had to agree to further reductions. 

Orderbook Japan

Japan nevertheless has dynamic shipowners, and the share of domestic orders in the Japanese yards is still very high, at nearly 60% in 1998 compared to 40% for export. The Japanese trading companies play a predominant role. 

However, the yards must face up to another challenge. In order to continuously improve their competitiveness, most of them have considerably reduced their personnel wherever possible, and notably with regard to their engineering and project management resources. 

Some yards have focused their production on one or two types of ship, which they then build in series. This is the case of Oshima and Tsuneishi for bulk carriers and Onomichi for refined product carriers. 

Diversified and single-product Japanese yards
On order at

Kawasaki

Oshima

Onomichi

Bulkers

1

40

-

Tankers

8

-

8

Containerships

1

-

-

Roro

2

-

-

Gas carriers

6

-

-

These ships have excellent designs and, in the keen competition for dry bulk cargo transport, it can be affirmed that shipowners (hardly) make any attempt today to ask for changes in the specifications. In this sense the Japanese yards have won their wager to design an industrial product without major involvement by the customer, whose role during building is diminishing little by little. Some shipowners still want to build their own ships, incorporating the fruit of their experience, in order to maintain a competitive advantage through lower operating costs, reduced maintenance and a higher resale value. They do not always obtain a favorable response from these specialized yards. Price is perhaps not the only factor in the choice. 

It might be wondered what the more or less long-term impact of this policy on the market will be, in that the shipowners, losing an additional competitive advantage, will not have any other choice than to order and sell at the right times; a complex exercise in a deflationary period. 

But Kentaro Aikawa later declared in December 1998: "1999 will not be an easy year for the shipbuilders. I do not see any sign favoring a recovery in prices. The industry suffers from overcapacity and financing difficulties, while the yen has strengthened". 

This demonstrated the fragility of positions that were taken for granted; many economic parameters outside the direct control of the yards can influence the course of activities. 

1998 was a difficult year for the country, with a decrease in gross domestic product and increases in bankruptcies and unemployment. 

The banking difficulties and the decrease in the bulk carrier market should have a negative effect on the number of domestic orders. 

In addition, a stronger yen and the pressure from the Korean shipyards should reduce the number of export orders, unless of course the Japanese economy, the second in the world, picks up or the yen depreciates. 


Korea

1998 ended much better than it began. The Korean yards have again increased their orderbook in absolute value and maintained their market share. 

In November 1997 the country was literally in shock. Bankruptcies threw about 10,000 people a day onto the streets. The paralysis that blocked the Korean economy and doubt about the magnitude of the crisis at first rendered the yards incapable of taking new orders. No order was recorded in January 1998. 

This period of uncertainty did not last long, because the Koreans reacted very quickly under the impetus of their new president. Workers, managers and directors agreed to make enormous sacrifices in the form of overtime and large salary reductions. 

An equilibrium, still fragile, was achieved in the Spring. Whereas the exchange rate had increased from about 900 won/$ in November 1997 to almost 2,000 at the end of 1997, the won stabilized at the end of March and the beginning of April at about 1,400. 

With the notable exception of the Halla yards, the large Korean yards such as Hyundai HI, Daewoo and Samsung did not stop taking orders from that point on, with Hanjin following them a few months later. It is interesting to note in this context that the country's orderbook has increased. In 1998 Korea's nominal capacity was thus reduced for the first time, because of the absence of Halla, without diminishing or affecting the actual national production capacity, in fact just the contrary. 

While prices have already dropped by 15 to 30%, some are wondering about how important it is for the country to maintain this status quo, insofar as the reactivation of the Halla yards could contribute to a further fall in prices, to the detriment of the other yards and the national interest. Time will tell. 

The main difficulty has been in setting up down-payment refund guarantees acceptable to the shipowners and their banks. The bank guarantees issued by Kexim, the Korean import-export bank, have had to be counter-guaranteed by Western banks or insured by first-rank insurance companies. 

However, this has not always been the case, and some Middle East shipowners were satisfied with Kexim guarantees. Others found their own financing. 

The Korean yards got around the difficulty by, for the first time, applying payment terms shifted toward delivery, thus facilitating the setting-up of these counter-guarantees because of the smaller amounts, whereas previously the yards had always favored installment payments during construction, such as 5 x 20%. This resulted in additional costs for the yards, as interest rates in Korea were also higher (up to 17%). At the same time the face value expressed in dollars decreased. 

It appeared that a certain level of confidence had been restored in the Spring, and payments, cash or brought forward towards the signing of the contract, could be negotiated in order to give the shipowners additional discounts, calculated on the cash advances thus agreed at very high interest rates. This no doubt once again altered the market's perception of the prices obtained. Overseas Shipholding Group (OSG) concluded a contract with Hyundai HI for a VLCC at approximately $65 million on the basis of payments shifted towards delivery. 

The Korean yards thus recorded many more orders than they had initially estimated. 

Orderbook Korea

However, in 1998 they had to face up to the disappearance of their domestic market. Shipowners such as Hanjin Shipping and Hyundai Merchant Marine, which in previous years had contributed about one third of the orders placed with the Hanjin and Hyundai HI yards, were no longer present and all the orders taken were for export. 

It is interesting to note that the Korean yards also contributed to their own success. They did so by deliberately and continuously improving their productivity. For example, the Daewoo yards announced productivity gains of 24% in 1997. However, as Daewoo did not set up new production capacity, its productivity gains can be estimated by the number of ships or the tonnage delivered in recent years: in 1990 Daewoo delivered 13 ships totaling 1 million gt, while in 1996 it delivered 30 ships totaling 2.25 million gt. Over the same period the number of employees decreased. 

The Korean shipbuilders also showed great flexibility in understanding and implementing shipowner demands, resulting in better quality and greater recognition by the international community. 

There has been much speculation about the future of the Halla and Daedong shipbuilding yards. Daedong continued to take orders. Two thirds of Halla's debt was cleared. But the situation of this yard is still blocked and will probably remain so until complete settlement of its debt. 

Despite the drop in prices, the main shipbuilders Hyundai HI, Daewoo, Samsung, Hanjin and Daedong will post profits for 1998. The South Korean government, under pressure from the IMF, is pushing the chaebols to reorganize themselves. This reorganization is already under way in the automotive and electronic industries, but no movement has yet been observed in shipbuilding. 

Although prospects for 1999 are still somber, 1998 finished better than it began: 

  • Korea was to repay part of its debt to the IMF in Dec 1998. The Yonhap agency recently quoted a government source stating that Korea was going to buy dollars because the won was at about 1,200, judged too high. 
  • The balance of payments turned around from a deficit of $8.2 billion at the end of 1997 to a surplus of $40 billion. 
  • The Seoul stock market rose by 50%. 

Moreover, according to the latest estimates, orders in 1998 should exceed 10 million gt, while the Korean orderbook broke the 20 million gt barrier at the end of the year. The Hyundai Economic Research Institute forecasts more than 10.5 million gt of orders for the Korean shipyards in 1999


China

The big surprise in 1998 came from China. The shipyards were not able to maintain their orderbooks, which fell from 3.2 million gt at the end of 1997 (2.9 million gt in the third quarter 1997) to about 2.6 million gt in the third quarter of 1998. 

Their market share also decreased. This reduction is in clear contradiction with the objectives and development prospects of Chinese shipbuilding. 

Orderbook China

The main reason for this situation was the relative appreciation of the yuan against the other currencies of the region (Korea and Japan), leading to increased competi tion, mainly from Korea, on the export market, and lower reactivity of these yards to the crisis and to the fall in prices. 

It should not be forgotten, either, that the orderbook of the Chinese yards had benefited in 1994 from the 30% devaluation of the yuan and the increase in demand for newbuilding bulk carriers. 

The Chinese yards have always positioned themselves with respect to their closest competitors by quoting at very similar levels, which was more difficult this year in a very changeable market. 

Another explanation is that a tanker cycle has started and only the Japanese and Korean yards build VLCCs and Suezmax today. The only VLCC construction dock in China is at the Dalian New Shipyard, which up to now has never built tankers of this size. 

Furthermore, it should also be noted that many shipowners continue to prefer the Japanese and Korean yards, more experienced particularly in the building of ships demanding more know-how such as these tankers or very large containerships. 

The Chinese authorities have decided to react to improve the competitiveness of their yards and accelerate their reorganization. The commercial structure, China Shipbuilding Trading Co Ltd, which includes 25 yards, is to be split up into three regions around Dalian in the North, Shanghai in the center and Guangzhou in the South. VAT, levied on ships intended for the domestic market, is to be abandoned to promote the domestic market, in a context where the Chinese shipowners Cosco, China Shipping and Sinotrans placed major orders for Capesize and Panamax bulk carriers with Korean and Japanese yards in 1998. 

China still wants to occupy a first-rank position in the near future, as shown by the projects to build VLCC construction docks. At present there are seven such projects. Some have slowed down because of financing difficulties, but all these docks will probably be completed soon. The fact that these construction docks will be operational at the end of the tanker cycle does not bode well for the shipbuilding market. 

Finally, the stock exchange listing of the Guangzhou yard should be highlighted, illustrating as it does a very capitalist manner for the state to divest itself of its most profitable enterprises. 

 




Shipping and Shipbuilding Markets 1999

I N D E X

›››File
Agreement reached at Mimit with JSW to relaunch the Piombino steelworks
Rome/Livorno
Gariglio: Strengthening integration between port docks and industrial areas
Agreement between Fincantieri and the Croatian shipyards Brodotrogir Cruise and Iskra Shipyard
Trieste
Initiative within the framework of the two-corvette program promoted by the Croatian Ministry of Defence
Evergreen, Yang Ming and WHL return to quarterly revenue growth
Keelung/Taipei
Four consecutive quarters of decline behind us
Project for a direct rail link between the port of Gioia Tauro and the Interporto D'Abruzzo
Pescara
Tax fraud on labor in the logistics sector
Milan
€28 million seized from four Milanese companies
PSA Genova Pra', the state of agitation has been lifted following the successful completion of the cooling procedure.
Genoa
ZPMC Delivers New Ultra-High Wind-Resistant Port Cranes
Shanghai
The world's tallest rail-mounted reach stackers for empty containers have also been built.
Peninsula and Itochu form joint venture to supply ammonia bunkering to European ports
Gibraltar
The initiative in response to the growing demand for zero-carbon fuels
Konecranes announced its entry into Japan
Helsinki/Tokyo
Acquisition of 70% of Mitsubishi Electric FA Industrial Products
Saipem wins $2 billion contract in Indonesia
Milan
Seven IMO regional coordinators have been introduced who will provide technical support to the organisation's Member States.
London
Jadrolinija has inaugurated its new fast maritime service Ancona-Zadar
Ancona/Zara
It provides five departures per week and a crossing of approximately four hours.
Hapag-Lloyd to reorganize services in the Adriatic
Hamburg
The port of Ancona, removed from the ADX line, will continue to be served by the IAS service
Eleven nominations for the eighteenth edition of the ESPO Award
Brussels
This year's theme is dual-use port-city projects
Jotun COSCO Marine Coatings signs agreement with COSCO Shipping Bulk for 125 new vessels
Sandefjord
Advanced hull performance solutions will be implemented
Maersk issues first order for new containers produced in India
Copenhagen
Local production has been stimulated by the introduction of incentives
Last May, freight traffic in the port of Ravenna grew by +3.4%
Ravenna
An increase of +10.6% is expected in June
Sardinia's Port Authority spent approximately €157 million in PNRR funds
Cagliari
Achievement of the targets expected by June 30, 2026
Hannibal will inaugurate a new intermodal service from Melzo to Rotterdam Europoort on July 8th.
Melzo
Six weekly trains are scheduled that will be able to carry up to 38 cargo units
PSA to build and operate container terminal at Vietnam's Lach Huyen port
Singapore
Agreement with Lach Huyen International Logistics & Industrial Park
Sandro Bucchioni and Andrea Fontana confirmed as presidents of the La Spezia freight forwarders and maritime agents.
La Spezia
New two-year mandate
Konecranes has acquired the nuclear and port services segment of Spain's Coapsa.
Hyvinkää
The company has an annual turnover of approximately four million euros.
PSA Italy presented its 2025 Sustainability Report
Genoa
The document highlights, among other things, the employment data and the economic impact on the territory
The Central-Northern Adriatic Port Authority confirms the completion of the projects financed by the PNRR
Ravenna
Mirco Carloni has taken office as president of the Central Adriatic Port System Authority.
Ancona
The Grimaldi Group has taken delivery of the new PCTC Grande Oriente
Naples
It will be placed on the Asia-Europe route
Port of La Spezia: 60 Sea Log workers rehired by other port companies
La Spezia
Pisano (AdSP): very satisfied with the positive conclusion of this dispute
The Central Adriatic Port Authority announces that it has achieved its objectives under the PNRR
Ancona
The funds coming from the plan financed by the European Union amounted to 39.6 million euros
A workshop on cold ironing and related risks and insurance solutions will be held in London.
London
Rossi (ADVANT-Nctm): effective infrastructure development must necessarily take into account legal and insurance aspects
Fincantieri signs an agreement in Albania for shipbuilding training.
Trieste
Skills development for the growth of the new Pashaliman naval industrial hub
Reorganization of ro-pax traffic areas in the port of Catania
Catania
Ferries will no longer be moored on the central jetty or along the eastern breakwater
Maersk raises fiscal 2026 forecast
Copenhagen
Continued growth in demand for containerized shipping and increased spot rates
Green light for the awarding of railway shunting services in the ports of Savona and Vado
New trucking area in the port of Genoa
The Italian Ports Association will hold its assembly in Naples on Wednesday.
Rome
The discussion on port governance reform will be at the heart of the proceedings.
Registration for seafarers' registers is now open to non-EU citizens residing in Italy.
Genoa
Vidotto (Foundation of the Italian Merchant Marine Academy): a step towards civilization
Project to build shipyard in Tartous port expected to accelerate
Damascus
Meeting between a delegation from Kuzey Star Shipyard and the leaders of the Syrian General Authority for Ports and Customs
SAILING LIST
Visual Sailing List
Departure ports
Arrival ports by:
- alphabetical order
- country
- geographical areas
Port of Gioia Tauro: Work to reactivate hauling and launching operations has been completed.
Gioia Tauro
These operations had been at a standstill since 2024
The conference "EU-Mercosur Agreement: The Role of the Maritime Economy" will take place in Genoa on July 1st.
Genoa
In Spain, €11.8 million in eco-incentives have been allocated for the use of motorways of the sea.
Madrid
163,672 shipments made by 32 companies subsidized
ABB has signed an agreement to buy Norwegian marine automation company Høglund.
Zurich
The Tønsberg-based company's integrated automation system is currently installed on over 600 vessels.
Port of Gioia Tauro: tender launched for the redevelopment of the ro-ro docks
Gioia Tauro
Worth 5.6 million euros, the works will last 210 days
Grimaldi confirms the important role of the port of Catania in its strategies
Catania
The aim is to increase services and make existing ones even more efficient.
Annual growth of +6% in cruise traffic and +2% in ferry traffic is expected in the Adriatic
Venice
It is the only Mediterranean region to have recorded a decline in cruises in the period 2019-2025
PSA Padova established to develop and manage the Padua intermodal terminal
Padua
The shareholders of Interporto Padova and Padova Hall have approved the merger plan
The Federagenti assembly will be held in Civitavecchia on July 3rd.
Rome
Pessina: We will not discuss regulations, community relations, or the pursuit of theories and bureaucracy, but rather the challenges of Italian port infrastructure.
Spediporto has opened its own representative office in Hong Kong
Genoa
Giachero: the opening of this desk is also an opportunity for young people
Arcese, Conti and Cosulich establish a company for the port logistics of finished vehicles
Livorno
HMM orders eight bulk carriers and two gas carriers
Seoul
Investment of approximately 1.1 billion dollars
MPC Container Ships has purchased four 7,000 TEU containerships built between 2023 and 2024.
Oslo
Investment of 340 million dollars
FedEx posts record quarterly and annual revenue
Memphis
Total revenues in fiscal year 2026 amounted to $94.7 billion (+7.7%)
Geopolitical uncertainty has become the main risk for shipping
Munich
Evergreen purchases 140,500 new containers in China
Taipei
Investments totaling $358.9 million
Memorandum of Understanding for the Launch of Drone Use in the Port of Palermo
Palermo
Submission of the request for the establishment of U-Space
Yesterday, the Strait of Hormuz was crossed by 42 commercial vessels
Paris
For the first time since the beginning of the conflict, several LNG tankers entered the Persian Gulf
Saipem wins new $1 billion offshore contract in Angola
Milan
It was awarded by Azule Energy for the Greater PAJ project
Port of Ancona: Dredging work has begun on the seabed of quay 22.
Ancona
Approximately six thousand cubic meters of sediment will be removed
Confitarma welcomes clarifications regarding ship waste collection management.
Rome
The need for uniform application of the legislation throughout the country was highlighted.
The Tuscan Cooperation Development Fund invests in Uniport Livorno.
Livorno
Operation for a total of 880 thousand euros carried out together with co-investor Coopfond
Fit-Cisl, recognizing dock work as arduous is a priority
Genoa
Pagnotta: This is not a corporate claim, but a question of social justice.
Hupac increases weekly rotations between Antwerp and Busto Arsizio via France to four.
Noise
Two additional departures of the intermodal service introduced
PORTS
Italian Ports:
Ancona Genoa Ravenna
Augusta Gioia Tauro Salerno
Bari La Spezia Savona
Brindisi Leghorn Taranto
Cagliari Naples Trapani
Carrara Palermo Trieste
Civitavecchia Piombino Venice
Italian Interports: list World Ports: map
DATABASE
ShipownersShipbuilding and Shiprepairing Yards
ForwardersShip Suppliers
Shipping AgentsTruckers
MEETINGS
The conference "EU-Mercosur Agreement: The Role of the Maritime Economy" will be held in Genoa on July 1st.
Genoa
It is organized by the Casa America ETS Foundation and the Western Liguria Port Authority
The Federagenti assembly will be held in Civitavecchia on July 3rd.
Rome
Pessina: We will not discuss regulations, community relations, or the pursuit of theories and bureaucracy, but rather the challenges of Italian port infrastructure.
››› Meetings File
PRESS REVIEW
World's first floating fusion reactor-powered vessel could become reality with new project
(Interesting Engineering)
Shipbuilding's Spring Illusion: Backbone Collapses
(The Chosun Daily)
››› Press Review File
FORUM of Shipping
and Logistics
Intervento del presidente Tomaso Cognolato
Roma, 19 giugno 2025
››› File
From July, the tariff for naval transit through the Turkish Straits will increase by +14.9%.
Istanbul
It will be raised to $6.70 per net tonne
Fincantieri and Republikorp sign agreement to build multipurpose naval vessels in Indonesia.
Paris
The establishment of a joint venture is planned
Study on the divergences between the EU Ship Recycling Regulation and the Hong Kong Convention
Brussels/London
It has been published by ECSA and ICS
The 2026-2028 POT of the Southern Tyrrhenian and Ionian Sea Port Authority has been approved.
Gioia Tauro
Approval also granted to the 2026 budget forecast variation and to the update of the Port's Staffing Plan.
Autonomous Navigation: ABS, Polaris Shipping, HHI, and AVIKUS Sign Agreement
Athens
It will be tested on a VLOC under certain low-risk conditions
Tomorrow in Sant'Agnello (Naples) the inauguration event of the Italy Branch of The Nautical Institute
London
The topics of discussion will include energy transition in the maritime industry, maritime education and training.
The Municipality of Bologna is reconsidering the divestment of its stake in Interporto Bologna.
Bologna/Bentivoglio
An institutional delegation from Flanders visited the interport
Eni and Fincantieri sign agreement to develop innovative underwater monitoring technologies.
Milan/Trieste
Agreement focused on Eni's "Clean Sea" technology
In 2025, LNG consumption in Italy grew by +11% driven by industry and new uses, with the debut in the naval segment
Rome
Amadei (Federchimica LNG Group): Use ETS and FuelEU revenues to support investments and deployment of lower-carbon fuels.
RT&L partners with China's Guangzhou Salvage to strengthen its project cargo segment
Genoa
Bizzarri: the sector is characterised by wide margins for development and profitability
Last year, cargo traffic in Greek ports amounted to 140.8 million tons (-1.5%)
Piraeus
Goods volumes remained unchanged in the fourth quarter only
The International Container Study Center's board and governing body have been renewed.
Genoa
Filippo Gallo confirmed as president and Paolo Pessina as vice-president
Catani (GNV): allocate ETS proceeds to the development of synthetic fuel production chains.
Rome
Resources - he specified - also for port infrastructures and the reduction of the cost differential compared to traditional fuels
Consultation launched on plans to expand the port areas of Fos
Marseille
The goal is to involve residents and local stakeholders
Somec signs €60 million contract with Finnish shipyard
San Vendemiano
One of the most complex interventions ever entrusted to the Horizons division
Daniele Rossi, former president of the port of Ravenna, has passed away.
Rome
He led the port authority for over eight years
ONE will remove calls in Greece and Türkiye from its Adriatic Service 1 service.
Singapore
In Italy it touches the ports of Venice and Ancona
The first phase of the APM Terminals terminal in the port of Suape has been inaugurated.
Suape
It will become operational in the second half of this year
Container traffic increased in May at the ports of Singapore and Hong Kong
Singapore/Hong Kong
Singapore sets record bunkering levels for liquefied natural gas and pure B100 biodiesel
Vavassori confirmed as president of the Lombardy Association of Freight Forwarders and Haulers
Milan
Albertina Schiavoni and Mario Zini have been appointed vice-presidents
The president of Angopi receives the first professional certificate of competence as a mooring man.
Savona
The certificate must be renewed every five years.
Fincantieri has delivered the new cruise ship Mein Schiff Flow to TUI Cruises.
Hamburg/Monfalcone
With a gross tonnage of approximately 160,000 tons, it has a capacity of approximately 4,000 passengers.
In the first three months of 2026, freight traffic in the port of Palermo decreased by -6.3%
Palermo
Traffic also decreased in the ports of Termini Imerese, Trapani, and Licata. Increases occurred in Porto Empedocle and Gela.
The Antitrust Authority has not given its final approval for the acquisition of Armas' assets and activities by Baleària.
Barcelona
Set a series of conditions
Assarmatori's annual assembly will take place in Rome on Tuesday.
Rome
The event's theme is "Instructions for not navigating in the dark."
VARD to build a new generation fishing vessel
Trieste
It was ordered by the Norwegian company Rosund Drift
Concentration in the UK shipbuilding sector
London
Baleana buys APCL Group (A&P Tyne, Cammell Laird and A&P Falmouth and Falmouth Docks and Engineering)
Royal Caribbean has taken delivery of its new Legend of the Seas cruise ship.
Miami
Built by Meyer Turku, it can accommodate 5,610 passengers
Informal hearings of trade union representatives on port governance reform
Rome
At the heart of the critical issues highlighted - confirms Filt-Cgil - is the planned establishment of Porti d'Italia Spa
Venice, the DPSS confirms the need to build new offshore terminals outside the lagoon.
Venice
The Strategic System Programming Document has been approved by the AdSP Management Committee
The Spinelli Group has joined the Italian Association of Port Terminal Operators
Genoa
The company and Assiterminal expressed satisfaction with the resumption of an important association
In the first three months of 2026, freight traffic at UK ports fell by -2.6%
London
More significant decrease (-6.8%) in boarding loads
Mark Hindley is the new president of the European Motor Vehicle Logistics Association
Istanbul
Wolfgang Göbel was elected honorary president
At the Port of Genoa, a tugboat was stopped for irregularities in nitrogen oxide emissions.
Genoa
The vessel is used for the construction works of the new breakwater
In April, freight traffic in the port of Ravenna grew by +21.4%
Ravenna
An increase of +2.5% is expected in May
Sallaum Lines to launch dedicated China-Europe service in 2027
Nanjing
Two new 7,400 CEU PCTCs taken delivery
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