testata inforMARE
Cerca
17 October 2025 - Year XXIX
Independent journal on economy and transport policy
01:32 GMT+2
LinnkedInTwitterFacebook
FORUM of Shipping
and Logistics


The Containerships Market in 1998  


Ships from 2,000 to 2,999 teu

2,500 to 2,999 teu vessels, displaced by ships of 4,000 teu or more in the main trades, have experienced strong down pressure. Rates for gearless units of around 2,500 teu have been easing up to some 50% for certain older ships. The large and speedy "compact" types which had managed to stay fairly out until the beginning of the year, had to face a discount of 35% and were under extremely strong pressure at the end of the year with a number of prompt vessels on the lists.

In the upper sizes, the year started with fixtures around the $19,000 level, such as the "CGM Pasteur", 2,898 teu, 22 knots, to Deppe Line at $18,875 daily or the "Mare Thracium", 2,959 teu, 22 knots to Sea-Land at $19,550 daily.

Like last year, Asian companies, and mainly South Korean owners, were very active in selling second hand tonnage and this resulted in a few long-term deals concluded mainly with Greek owners. For instance, Hanjin Shipping Co. sold and chartered back seven gearless vessels of 2,662 teu, 21 knots, at a daily rate of $17,000. In October 1997, a similar transaction gave them some $20,000 and the tonnage was four years older... Other South Korean ships, "Choyang Victory" and "Choyang Success", 2,662 teu, 22 knots, were also sold to Greeks with 4 years t/c back at $18,300 daily.

In November, the "Joseph", 2,432 teu, 20.5 knots, gearless, was fixed by K Line for 12 months at $11,500 daily (a RW 49 rate back in 1995...). Further sisterships were chartered at rates of around $12,000 a day, whereas as underlined above, similar sized tonnage was able to command $18,300-18,400 daily at the beginning of the year. Periods offered by the charterers were often short, placing those vessels in the same treatment as for the smaller vessels, with owners forced to accept 3 to 5 months charters or even simple round-voyages.

Clearly, there were two different strategies on owners’ side. Those who were preferring to "cut one arm" by fixing lousy terms on period basis, and those who were holding up for better rates and concentrating on short term business, taking advantage of the booming exports from Asia or repositonning of empties to kill some time.

A few examples illustrate this attitude: "Hansa Century", 2,810 teu, 22 knots, fixed in July to ZIM for $13,000 daily or a sister committed to MSC in August at $12,000 daily, both for periods of almost one year, whilst similar tonnage was preferring short term employment around the $15,000 level.

Every fixture was clearly down from the previous one, but the worst hit sector has once again been the category governing gearless 20 knotters of around 2,000 teu. Not only are they finding themselves between feeder and main trades, but even at 20 knots, they are finding it increasingly difficult to compete with the faster newbuildings.

Even fast units were hit, such as the "Lindavia", 2,078 teu, 21.5 knots, taken by Maersk in September for $10,300 daily. At the end of last year, similar ships were achieving $15,000. Another frightening example is the "Pax", 2,078 teu, 20.5 knots, which struggled to remain employed but could not avoid serious idle times in the summer. End September, she was finally fixed to P&O Nedlloyd for 6 months at $8,000 daily, almost half the level she had achieved a year before.

In the same spirit was the fixture of the "Diman" to MSC at $7,400 for a year. Sea-Land had paid $9,200 for her back in May.

The big surprise came from the geared ships of 2,000- 2,500 teu, size on which numerous owners had been betting. With Latin Americans being hit by the crisis, some operators decided to "reduce the sail" and naturally the massive arrival of newbuildings created a panicking situation.

 Containerships on order

At the beginning of the year, fixtures were concluded in the region of $18,500. Then, very little activity took place for a few months with hardly any reported fixtures. Only the "City of London", 2,000 teu, 21 knots, 3 x 45 cranes, was then reported in July, fixed by CGM at $15,000 daily. With the waves of newbuildings coming on stream, rates were then pushed down to the $11,500 level after the summer and finally reaching the $9,000 bar at the end of the year with the fixtures of the "Westerem", "Westerburg" and "Columba" to Deppe Line at $9,250 daily. That size, which had been foreseen by most actors as "the fashionable size", came down almost 50% since January only and close to 60% from 1995 peaks. This is illustrated by the fixture of the "Zrin", 2,275 teu, 19.6 knots, fixed in November 1995 by Hapag Lloyd for $23,000 a day and 2 years outright, against $9,500 in November this year to CSAV.

Ships from 1,000 to 1,999 teu

With more than 90 new vessels coming out of yards during 1998, we observed a continuing cascade as older tonnage was being redelivered from existing contracts. A large number of vessels found no other alternative than to fix single trips, again taking advantage of exports expansion from the Far East. As a result, the imbalance in rates between the Far Eastern and the Atlantic markets has narrowed terribly.

Every order was meeting tonnage in a prompt position and rates suffered tremendous pressure. At the end of the year, geared vessels of 1,650-1,750 teu range were down to some $7,750, down from 8,500 in the fall, 9,250 after the summer, region 11,500 at spring time and about 12,000 daily a year ago. Less than 3 years back, ships of this type were beating records at peaks close to $18,000.

Another clear observation is that the rate differential between geared and gearless tonnage has virtually disappeared for vessels offering good speed performances. This was evidenced for instance, by the fixtures concluded by Maersk of the "Cape Norman" and her sistership, 1,504 teu, 21 knots, fixed in August for $9,450 for 6 months. Slower units were still taking a beating like the "Global Horizon", 1,552 teu, 19 knots, fixed at the end of the year for only $6,000.

Showing the significant softer market in the medium sizes are the "Birte Ritscher" and the "Wieland", 20,000 dwt, 1,452 teu, 19 knots and geared, fixed for 6 months in September to OTAL at $8,500 a day. Their last charter was $10,500 back in February.

In September, the "Olivia", 20,000 dwt, 1,388 teu, 18.5 knots, was reported extended at $8,000 a day, down $2,500 from her original fixture in March to South Americans.

Again with the huge number of newbuildings, the lower sizes experienced very soft conditions.

At the end of the year, the geared "Lilly Rickmers" and the "Mai Rickmers", 1,162 teu, 17 knots, were chartered to CGM and Sea-Land for $7,000 daily. "Elise Schulte" and "Auguste Schulte", 17,520 dwt, 1,208 teu, 17.5 knots, were reported gone at $6,850. Back in the spring time, those vessels were still earning $9,750. Faster vessels were as always doing a little better, as evidenced by the extensions of the "Castor" and "Saturn", 18,400 dwt, 1,150 teu, 18.5 knots, by TMM for $8,800 daily, although itself $1,700 lower than rates paid for such units back in June 1998.

Being often replaced by above modern tonnage, traditional compact vessels such as RW49 continued to take a beating with numerous vessels open on a prompt basis, rates have been falling from around $8,700 at the beginning of the year, slipping to 8,000 and then low 7,000 during the summer. They finished the year in the very low 6,000s.

Ships from 500 to 999 teu

Ships in the 500-700 teu range experienced contrasting fortunes, as demand in the Far East has evaporated. The gearless sector (where much less good choice was available) remained surprisingly stable. This category benefited from increased interest in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Baltic. Some of the fastest units even managed some increases over their last fixtures. In the autumn, we observed that fast quality, shallow compact 700 teu ships were even commanding premiums on standard 1,000 teu designs.

In the lower part of this category, smaller ships were also holding up for a few months compared with the upper categories, although rates were also softening at the end of the year.

Ships from 200 to 499 teu

Alike the preceding category, the market for 200 to 500 teu ships has stayed fairly stable and the modern, fast units managed to resist the general trend during the first months of the year. Ships that were aiming at rates in the region of $6,000 at the end of 1997, were finally fixed well below this level at the beginning of the year.

At the end of the year, similar tonnage was willing to fix sensibly below the five thousand dollar bar. In the smaller sizes, short term business prevailed and geography determined the softness of the rates. Some non-cellularized tonnage obviously turned to other markets such as the mini-bulk or project cargoes for those with heavy-lift capacity.

Ships fixed in the Atlantic were generally having better earnings. For example, the "Aron", 4,870 dwt, 333 teu, geared and 14 knotter, gone in May for 6 months Caribbean trade at $4,600 or the "Angelica Schulte", 370 teu, 2 x 40 tons, 15.5 knots, at $4,800. While, in the Far East, similar size, but often slower ships, were forced much closer to the four thousand dollar level, for instance, the "Srakane", 336 teu, 2 x 25 tons, 12 knots, extended for Indian Ocean trade for 6 months at $4,100.

Smaller vessels such as "Uglegorsk" types, 221 teu, 2 x 25 tons cranes, 12 knots, were fixing in the mid threes at the end of the year and a number of vessels were still left on the lists.

Conclusion

Clearly the overtonnaging has now become frightening and analysis of changing demand patterns gives no big reasons for optimism, as even the introduction of new strings fails to make any significant impression as large and speedy new vessels continue to enter the fleet.

As observed above, with a few exceptions, all sectors continued to experience weakness and at the end of the year, charterers placing new orders on the market were submerged with avalanches of proposals. Given the lists of prompt tonnage, the feeling was shared by all actors that we should remain locked in this depressed environment for some time.

So far, the situation has not become so bad as to force ships into lay-up. However, as rates continue to tumble and owners’ earnings erode, attention is switching to the bankers to see how they will respond to their clients’ plight in the next few months. With the prevailing trend, rates are unlikely to be sufficient to repay the mortgages and a continued depression in the market could well force many lenders to reconsider their strategic position.

Another worrying factor is the decline of the US dollar. The Deutsche Mark is now about 12% off its heights and owners who are constantly suffering lower rates, are now being doubly hit.

A consolation is that new ships deliveries will fall sensibly in 1999 and scrapping appears to be increasing. Overaged vessels will become much harder to fix, although low bunker prices are still keeping some fast old ships in business. Any upturn in fuel costs could of course modify the cards and accelerate the scrapping trend. Containerships are however generally considered to have a much longer life compared with other general cargo ships, tankers or bulk carriers, as they are much less susceptible to hull damage from cargo. Also, fast needs and changing of routes pattern have made it possible for the re-assignment to minor trade routes for older ships.

 Containership deliveries

The rash of take-overs and mergers is far from being over yet. Some medium size players, mainly North / South operators have shown to be conscious of the potential squeeze by the mega-carriers who continue to expand their networks into the niche lines and specialized trades. As we underlined last year, the implication in most of these operations is that there will be further combined services and appropriate down sizing which will naturally manifest itself by less chartered vessels. Additionally, more and more potential requirements are being covered internally between partners, after internal rescheduling of own tonnage and is further business lost for the market.

As you realize, we do not see the tide turning in a near future. With charterers remaining very confident that the market is moving in their direction, we will naturally remain mostly with short periods and multiple options for some time. Let’s hope that some charterers, within a few months, (summer / fall 1999?) will then start wondering whether the timing has not arrived on certain sizes to take advantage of particularly attractive rates on the basis of longer commitments. This could then be interpreted as a first "shy" step towards market recovery.

To conclude on a more positive note, we observed that a number of the mega-operators are moving towards chartering rather than owning tonnage. This is seen as another way of upgrading their fleets, without the risk of finding themselves after sometime with obsolete tonnage for their changing requirements, and obtain further economies of scale through larger ships without the hefty capital outlay of a newbuilding order. As we observed in previous years, a huge part of the battle is being conducted on shore and such operators will then be in a position to concentrate their investments on port terminals, services to their shippers, etc...

This could constitute a serious opening for a new type of long term bilateral relationships between main line operators and First Class owners.

The container ship second-hand market

In general, activity was relatively low and concentrated above all in the first half of 1998.

A total of about 70 units were sold on the trading market, including 30 ships of less than 1,000 teu and 20 ships in each of the categories 1,000-2,000 and 2,000- 3,000 teu.

The feeder ship market slowed considerably compared with 1997. Slow gearless ships had the hardest time finding buyers, when they managed to find them at all. The general increase in size of the feeder type, often exceeding the 1,000 teu barrier, is seen clearly here. It is therefore easy to understand the present reluctance of shipowners to make long-term commitments by purchasing one or more units already practically obsolete in terms of their size, their speed or their lack of gear.

The sale of a ship such as the "Premier" (700 teu, built in 1983, gearless) to the owner Vroon at a price of $7 million is perfectly representative of the fall in prices in this sector.

Other significant sales:

  • "Kris Terasek", built in 1985, 7,676 dwt, 440 teu, 2 x 36 tonnes, 13 knots, sold in August for $3.1 million to Turkish buyers,
  • "Tranztas Trader", built in 1988, 14,205 dwt, 1,000 teu, 2 x 40 tonnes, 15.5 knots, sold in March for $7 million to clients of OEL,
  • "Tiger Wave", built in 1988, 17,503 dwt, 790 teu, 3 x 40 tonnes, 15 knots, sold in June for $6 million to clients of Pacific and Atlantic.

The 1,600-1,800 teu ship category suffered from the massive arrival of new units ordered in large numbers, notably through the German KGs.

The vertiginous drop in charter rates has without contest discouraged buyers, who foresee the deterioration of a situation that already poses problems given the size of the orderbooks.

Newbuilding prices have fallen so low that the book value of modern ships substantially exceeds the cost of ordering equivalent new ships. As a consequence the sale of recent ships has become impossible, unless the shipowners take book losses that are for the time being judged unacceptable.

Significant sales:

  • "Hanjin Chungmu", built in 1981, 25,700 dwt, 1,662 teu, gearless, sold in June for $4.5 million to clients of Target Marine,
  • "Buxsea", built in 1985, 33,860 dwt, 1,923 teu, gearless, sold in June for $8.5 million to clients of Vroon,
  • "Richmond Bridge", built in 1983, 32,631 dwt, 1,830 teu, gearless (1,730 x 14 tonnes homogenous), sold in March for $9 million to clients of Tanker Pacific.

The 2,000-3,000 teu segment is probably the one that has least suffered, given the small number of ships available for sale. This contributed to maintaining prices at an honorable level.

During the second half-year, the fall in newbuilding prices linked with a substantial drop in rates, approximately 40% over the year, significantly degraded this picture. The majority of the transactions concluded were the sales of Korean ships with back charters, these opera tions being motivated only by the cash problems of these owners as a consequence of the economic and financial crisis that is hitting this region. Hanjin, which had sold seven ships (2,900 teu, built in 1986/1987) at the end of 1997 for $23 million per ship and four years back charter at $20,000/day, sold the same type of ship, but three or four years younger, in the middle of 1998 at the same price against a three-year back charter at $16,700/day!

Significant sales:

  • "Hanjin Vancouver" and six sister ships, built in 1990/1991, 43,270 dwt, 2,668 teu, 21 knots, were sold to a consortium comprising Samatzis, Drytank and Danaos at a unit price of $23 million, against a three-year back charter at $16,700/day,
  • "Choyang Glory" and "Choyang Victory", built in 1990, 44,000 dwt, 2,797 teu, 21 knots, sold in May for $23.5 million per unit to clients of the Ofer group.

In 1998 about 50 ships were scrapped despite a very substantial fall in the prices on the scrapping market. All sizes were involved. This is probably the only good news to be reported this year. Although this figure is encouraging, it nevertheless remains insufficient to have a real impact on the still-growing unbalance between supply and demand.

There is no doubt that price alone is a strong motivation for newbuilding orders. It would be pointless to remind the reader here of the inevitable consequences of continued ordering in a market that is already very unhealthy. The risk here is to see some shipowners obliged to place orders, if only to align themselves with competitors who might profit tomorrow from today’s low prices. Under these conditions the arrival of the recovery has to be pushed back a little further.




Shipping and Shipbuilding Markets 1999

I N D E X

›››File
P&O Maritime Logistics completes acquisition of controlling stake in NovaAlgoma Cement Carriers
Lugano
Obtained the necessary regulatory approvals
Fatal accident in the port of Ravenna
Ravenna
A 67-year-old truck driver lost his life at the Sapir terminal.
A Norwegian delegation visits the Northern Tyrrhenian Port Authority
Livorno
ABB's quarterly financial performance shows sharp growth
Zurich
In the period July-September the value of new orders increased by +11.6%
Fratelli Neri buys two tugboats produced by Egypt's Misr Tugboats Factory
Ismailia
They will be taken into delivery in the first quarter of 2026
COSCO Shipping Ports Sets New Quarterly Container Traffic Record
Hong Kong
In the period July-September, 29.8 million TEUs were handled (+3.6%)
Container traffic in the port of Hong Kong fell by -9.2% in the third quarter
Hong Kong
A 16.3% drop was recorded in September
Port of Civitavecchia appoints members of the Marine Resources Partnership Body
Civitavecchia
He will remain in office for four years
New quarterly record for container traffic handled by CMPort port terminals
Hong Kong
New highs recorded both in China and at overseas ports
CMA CGM to order six feeder containerships from Cochin Shipyard
Kochi
Order worth approximately 300 million dollars
Efficient solutions for the port launching of floating wind turbines are being studied in France
Trondheim/Brest
Agreement between the Norwegian BOA and the port of Brest
Augusta Due has acquired a second new tanker built by Fujian Southeast Shipbuilding Co.
Rome
It has a capacity of 18,590 deadweight tons.
IRU, CLECAT, ESC and GCCA oppose binding targets for demand for zero-emission trucks
Brussels
They ask to focus instead on creating favorable conditions for operators to be able to use them.
Marialaura Dell'Abate is the new president of Confitarma's Young Shipowners' Group.
Rome
In the third quarter, cargo traffic in Russian ports grew by +4%
St. Petersburg
Only import loads are decreasing
Matteo Caiti appointed country manager for Italy at Forto
Milan
The goal is to consolidate growth on the Italian market
DP World to build and operate multimodal terminal in Uzbekistan
Dubai
Joint venture with Tashkent Invest
Confitarma welcomes Senate approval of simplification measures for the maritime transport sector.
Rome
A rapid approval in the Chamber is also hoped for
Applications for rail freight transport incentives are now open.
Rome
From today the requests to access the Ferrobonus
The maritime, port and logistics sector asks the Ministry of Transport for clarification on the regulation on waiting times for loading and unloading goods
Rome
A dialogue was called to determine the identification of correct application indications of the law
Four icebreakers for the U.S. Coast Guard will be built in Finland.
Washington
Agreement signed by Presidents Donald Trump and Alexander Stubb
PSA International wins the "Best Singapore Investor in Italy" award.
Genoa
It was awarded by the Italian Chamber of Commerce in Singapore
The Italian Navy's Olterra ship was launched in Genoa.
Genoa
It is the first military project built by the T. Mariotti shipyard
The first ferry owned by the Sicilian Region launched in Palermo
Palermo
Folgiero: Revitalization of the Sicilian shipyard as part of Fincantieri's new industrial plan
In the third quarter, containers carried by OOCL vessels increased by +0.7%
Hong Kong
Accentuation of the reduction in revenues which fell by -25.9%
Assologistica approves new rules on pallet exchange
Rome
Approved by the Senate, the text passes to the Chamber of Deputies
Offshore wind farm in the port of Augusta ready in two or three years
Palermo
Di Sarcina: We are confident in a rapid allocation of the planned resources, amounting to approximately 50 million euros.
In the Netherlands, a self-driving vessel has been authorised to sail outside a restricted area.
Rotterdam
German company Helsing acquires Blue Ocean Monitoring
London
Australian company builds self-driving submarines
SAILING LIST
Visual Sailing List
Departure ports
Arrival ports by:
- alphabetical order
- country
- geographical areas
The decree designating the port of Taranto as a national offshore wind hub has been made official.
Taranto
Gugliotti: Unlock resources for modernizing and upgrading port areas
One of two injured sailors from vessel attacked in Gulf of Aden dies
Amsterdam/London
Dominquez (IMO): Strong condemnation of any type of attack against ships
Salvini met with the deputy CEO of the Turkish terminal operator Yilport.
Rome
At the centre of the meeting was the dredging of the port of Taranto.
The Logistics & Sea Academy has equipped itself with new simulators for operating ships, tugboats, trains and port cranes
Venice
Investment of four million euros
Giovanni Punzo, founder and president of CIS - Interporto Campano for thirty years, has died.
Nola
Among the founders of Italo, the first private Italian operator on the high-speed rail network
The new two-masted ro-ro ship Neoliner Origin will arrive in Livorno tomorrow.
Vado Ligure
It has a capacity of 1,200 linear meters of rolling stock
The refinancing of the Setramar group's capital structure has been completed.
Ravenna
Merli: a crucial step in our growth journey
Liguori's term as head of the Trieste Port Authority has been extended.
Rome
Confirmed in the role of extraordinary commissioner of the institution
Agreement to complete electrification work on the docks at the port of Gioia Tauro
Gioia Tauro
The 70 million euro investment to complete the project has been confirmed.
A Maersk delegation at the Grendi Group's container terminal in Cagliari's Porto Canale.
Milan
At the centre of the debate is the development of traffic towards North Africa
Geodis appoints Maurizio Bortolan as CEO for Italy
Milan
It will coordinate the three business lines Contract Logistics, Freight Forwarding and Road Transport
Port of Livorno: Protests over Gaza must not block operations.
Livorno
The members of the Partnership Body highlighted the need for it to be accessible to all vessels
GNV, agreement with Sicilian terminal operator Portitalia is positive.
Genoa
The company specified that the aim was exclusively to temporarily supplement the tariffs.
Two days of work with ESPO in Rome on the Mediterranean and European ports
Rome
Meetings organized by Assoporti
In 2024, 112 million counterfeit items were seized in the European Union.
Brussels
Record estimated value of 3.8 billion euros
Strikes and protests in ports, request for information from the Guarantor
Rome
Request for information from prefects, port authorities, and port authorities
Danaos Corporation has ordered two 7,165 TEU containerships from Dalian Shanhaiguan.
Athens
They will be taken into delivery in the third quarter of 2027
In the second quarter, freight traffic on the Austrian rail network fell by -1.4%.
Vienna
Only domestic traffic is growing
ALS (FBH Group) has acquired 80% of Trans World Shipping and Moda Express of USA.
Rozzano
The two companies have 500 employees and are active in Italy, France, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Circle's revenue increased by 62.1% in the first half of 2025
Milan
Net profit of over 1.0 million euros (+1.8%)
A Ukrainian delegation hosted by the Northern Tyrrhenian Sea Port Authority
Livorno
Cooperation in the field of training and safety at work in ports
The EIB is financing Phase A of Genoa's new breakwater with €300 million.
Luxembourg
The total investment is 937 million euros
This summer, GNV ships carried 1.7 million passengers (+9%)
Valencia
In the next few days the company will take delivery of "GNV Virgo", the first LNG-powered vessel
The project for the expansion, safety improvements, and extraordinary maintenance of the port of Pozzallo has been presented.
Pozzallo
It provides for the construction of the breakwater arm
Fincantieri delivers the new Star Princess cruise ship to Princess Cruises
Monfalcone
It has a gross tonnage of 177,800 tons and a capacity of 4,300 passengers.
A seminar on the new law on interports will be held in Milan on October 2nd.
Milan
It is organized by the Chamber of Commerce of Padua
Filt Cgil calls on port administrators and businesses to join the action against the Palestinian massacre.
Rome
This burden – the union highlighted – cannot be placed solely on the shoulders of dock workers.
The agreement between the Italian Merchant Marine Academy Foundation and the NATO Center in La Spezia has been renewed.
Genoa
The collaboration signed in 2023 has been confirmed
Fischer & Rechsteiner and Gimax International acquire BCUBE's Freight Forwarding business.
Genoa
The completion of the transaction is expected in the next few days
Fermerci outlines a dramatic scenario for the European rail freight transport sector
Rome
Rizzi: There is a real risk of a shift towards exclusively road transport.
Sogedim opens a new branch in Modena
Mesero
Initially, the activity will be dedicated exclusively to UK export traffic and will then extend to other European markets.
Eni completes the sale of a 30% stake in the Baleine project in Ivory Coast to Vitol.
San Donato Milanese
The field was discovered in 2021 and production started in 2023
The new PCTC Grande Svezia has joined the Grimaldi Group's fleet.
Naples
It has a maximum capacity of 9,000 ceu
The Cagliari City Council approves its opinion on the Sardinian Ports Development Plan.
Cagliari
Green light unanimously
The railway sector contributes 1.4% of the European Union's GDP.
Brussels
Study commissioned by CER
In the port of Naples, the Coast Guard has detained the bulk carrier Tanais Dream.
Naples
Serious irregularities found on board
Agreement to accelerate the implementation of robotics in Fincantieri's production processes
Trieste
It was signed with the Friulian Idea Prototipi
Sergio Liardo is the new general commander of the Port Authority Corps - Coast Guard
Rome
He takes over from Admiral Nicola Carlone
DBA to supply new Terminal Operating System for Georgia's Batumi Port
Villorba
The project includes all phases of development, testing and operational testing
Attack on a ship in the Gulf of Aden
Portsmouth
The captain reported hearing an impact in the water and an explosion
Danilo Ricci has been appointed managing director of Tarros Line.
La Spezia
He has held various positions in Italy and abroad within the group
Permanent discussion table between Confindustria Nautica and Federagenti
Genoa
This is provided for in an agreement signed today in Genoa
In the first half of 2025, cruise traffic in Italian ports grew by +6%
Venice
The twelfth edition of Italian Cruise Day will be held in Catania on October 24th.
SAL Heavy Lift buys two semi-submersible vessels from Pan Ocean
Hamburg
They were built in 2008 and 2012
30% of Sangritana Cargo will be acquired by the Marche-based company Transadriatico
The Eagle
The sale will be completed in the next few days
The eighth edition of "A Sea of Switzerland" will be held in Lugano on October 6th.
Lugano
Forum on economic and logistical integration between Ligurian ports, the Northwest manufacturing area, and Switzerland
Assoporti will meet at RemTech EXPO 2025 to discuss the green transition in Italian ports.
Ferrara
The Smart Ports Award was awarded to three Port System Authorities
DEME orders new cable-laying vessel from Singapore-based PaxOcean
Beveren-Kruibeke-Zwijndrecht
It will be built in the Chinese shipyard of Zhoushan
The first shipment of Syrian oil in 14 years arrives at the port of Trieste.
London
Part of the cargo - S&P Global Commodity Insights reports - was unloaded at the Sardinian terminal of Sarroch
In August, freight traffic in the port of Taranto grew by +20.3%
Taranto
The ferry "Drea" was also rejected by the Apulian port, where however it is temporarily stopped
Container traffic at the Port of Los Angeles remained stable in August.
Los Angeles
Volumes expected to decline in the remainder of 2025
Meeting between the port authorities of Jacksonville and Livorno
Livorno
Among the objectives, to start one or more direct services between the two ports
Italian State Railways and ENAC sign an agreement for the use of drones in infrastructure monitoring.
Rome
They will also be used to fly over sections of the railway and road network that would otherwise be difficult to monitor.
A.SPE.DO, the port of La Spezia is essential to ensuring employment, development, and a future for the local economy.
La Spezia
Landolfi: We cannot afford to underestimate its value.
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
A seminar on the new law on interports will be held in Milan on October 2nd.
Milan
It is organized by the Chamber of Commerce of Padua
The eighth edition of "A Sea of Switzerland" will be held in Lugano on October 6th.
Lugano
››› Meetings File
PRESS REVIEW
We'II Rebuild Apapa, Tin-Can Ports In 48 Months - Dantsoho
(Leadership)
Korean Firms Reassess U.S. Investments After Mass Immigration Raid
(The Korea Bizwire)
››› Press Review File
FORUM of Shipping
and Logistics
Intervento del presidente Tomaso Cognolato
Roma, 19 giugno 2025
››› File
The MIT meets with the heads of the Italian AdSPs
Rome
Meeting on the government's strategic vision for the sector and port reform
Yang Ming orders Hanwha Ocean Co. to build seven 15,880 TEU container ships
Keelung
They will be delivered between 2028 and 2029
Over 40 expressions of interest have been received for the development of the Ukrainian port of Chornomorsk.
Kiev
Today the first meeting of the tender commission
The first commercial ship is expected at the public dock in Largo Trattaroli in Ravenna.
Ravenna
The car carrier "AICC Huanghu" is coming soon
Assiterminal's Terminal Road Show is starting
Genoa
Cognolato: We want to strengthen our ties with local communities and territories.
Container traffic at the Port of Long Beach decreased by 1.3% last month.
Long Beach
Empty containers are increasing. Full containers are decreasing.
Assoporti, the Italian ports' cruise offerings presented at the Seatrade Europe fair.
Hamburg
Giampieri: We are leaders in the Mediterranean area and in Europe
Commander Claudio Tomei, USCLAC president from 2012 to 2024, has passed away.
Viareggio
His strong commitment to improving the working conditions of Italian seafarers
In the first quarter of 2025, cargo traffic in Greek ports grew by +1.4%
Piraeus
Passengers down by -1.1%
HD Hyundai Samho Orders Four New Container Ships
Seoul
Order worth approximately 468 million dollars
Trieste: Fraudulent bankruptcy in the shipbuilding sector
Trieste
Investigation into a company based in Palermo
Container traffic in the port of Hong Kong fell by 7.4% in August.
Hong Kong
In the first eight months of 2025 the decline was -3.8%
Container traffic at the port of Singapore continued to decline in August
Singapore
Total volume of goods increased by +1.1%
BigLift Shipping and CY Shipping order two additional heavy lift vessels
Amsterdam
Order placed at Chinese shipyard Jing Jiang Nanyang Shipbuilding Co.
The Charthage ferry was placed under administrative detention in the port of Genoa
Genoa
A Coast Guard inspection found numerous deficiencies
Disney Cruise Line's largest ship's debut delayed by three months
Lake Buena Vista
Construction delays force the maiden voyage to be postponed until March 10th.
- Via Raffaele Paolucci 17r/19r - 16129 Genoa - ITALY
phone: +39.010.2462122, fax: +39.010.2516768, e-mail
VAT number: 03532950106
Press Reg.: nr 33/96 Genoa Court
Editor in chief: Bruno Bellio
No part may be reproduced without the express permission of the publisher
Search on inforMARE Presentation
Feed RSS Advertising spaces

inforMARE in Pdf
Mobile