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ANNUAL REPORT 2006-2007

 

3. The RoRo market

 

3.1 Overview of four RoRo submarkets

Broadly speaking, the RoRo market encompasses four main sub-markets. Firstly, there is the deepsea segment which can be divided into car carrying trades and regular liner trades with RoRo-facilities. Secondly, we have the shortsea segment which can be divided into ferry transport for both passengers (with cars) and rolling freight on the one hand, and freight-only RoRo transport (including containers on mafis) on the other. These four sub-markets will be dealt with in this chapter.

 

3.1.1 Deepsea - Car carrying trades

 

3.1.1.1 Vehicle manufacturing and worldwide seaborne vehicle trade

The vehicle manufacturing industry nowadays produces about 65 million units per year and is characterized by chronic overcapacity (plant utilisation is estimated at some 73% of capacity on a global level, whereas according to industry specialists a level of 80% is needed in order to earn a decent profit) and chronically poor return on investment14. Moreover, just like many other industries, the vehicle manufacturing industry has witnessed an ever-increasing degree of concentration and globalisation over the last few decades. As a result, the industry nowadays counts just 15 (global) players. The top-seven manufacturers, many of which feature a whole myriad of different car brands in their portfolio15, accounted for 46.7 million vehicles in 2005 or nearly 75% of worldwide production (Table 23). It is assumed that by 2010-2012 the number of global vehicle manufacturers will have further reduced to 9 or 10.

 

Table 23: Leading automobile manufacturers in 2005

 

Output (m)

%

 

Output (m)

%

General Motors

10.9

17.2%

Fiat

2.4

3.8%

Toyota

7.6

12.0%

Mitsubishi

1.9

3.0%

Ford

7.4

11.7%

Suzuki Motor

1.8

2.8%

Daimler-Chrysler

6.3

9.9%

BMW Group

1.4

2.2%

VW-Audi

5.4

8.5%

AutoVaz

1.3

2.1%

Renault-Nissan

5.3

8.4%

Mazda Motor

1.0

1.6%

PSA Group

3.8

6.0%

Fuji Heavy Ind.

0.9

1.4%

Hyundai Motor

3.0

4.7%

     

Honda

3.0

4.7%

Total

63.4

100%

Source: Drewry Shipping Consultants (2006)

 

14

According to Drewry Shipping Consultants, average profit margins in car manufacturing have declined from 20% in the early 1920s to around 0% in the 1960s and less than 5% today.

15

General Motors, for example, includes brands such as Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Saab, Chevrolet, Saturn, Holden, Pontiac, Opel, Isuzu, Buick and Vauxhall cars. Similarly, Ford Motor Company marques include Ford, Volvo, Lincoln-Mercury, Aston-Martin, Jaguar, Land Rover and Mazda. Next, Daimler-Chrysler covers Mercedes-Benz, Jeep, Chrysler, Smart Car, Plymouth, Maybach and Dodge, while Volkswagen-Audi encompasses Volkswagen, Audi, Skoda, Seat, Bugatti, Bentley and Lamborghini. On the other hand, Toyota only includes the Toyota and Lexus (luxury) brand, and the PSA Group only encompasses Peugeot and Citroën.

16

In 2006 eight of the world's largest car manufacturers had a facility in South Africa.

17

Due to fierce price undercutting among domestic producers, the average price of China's exported cars has dropped from USD 16,100 per unit in 1999 to USD 9,100 per unit in 2005. Nowadays Chinese car exports mainly consist of low-end models that are sold to emerging markets such as South East Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, South Africa and Russia (Nightingale, 2007).

18

Although deepsea transport of vehicles has already been in existence since the end of the 1950s (with Volkswagen and Renault taking the lead for shipments to the US), the deepsea car carrying market did not fully take off until the 970s with worldwide trading of Japanese cars (Isemar, 2007:01).

19

This represents a 66% increase over the 9m units transported overseas in 1995.

20

Figure 3 does not include the Scandinavia/Baltic region. This region, however, is also of major importance to the European automotive industry, with large assembly factories (e.g. Volvo and Saab in Sweden) and substantial import/export car traffic shipped through Scandinavian/Baltic ports.

Over the years the car manufacturing industry has witnessed important geographical shifts. While established production markets such as Europe, North America and Japan are nowadays indeed still dominant as far as output is concerned, emerging markets in Asia (China, India and Thailand), the Middle-East, South-Africa16, Eastern Europe, Russia or South-America have rapidly gained in importance in recent years. Many of these latter regions have welcomed substantial investments in large car assembly factories. As a result their importance for the worldwide car manufacturing market has increased significantly, and is expected to continue to do so in the years to come. As an example, production in South Asia is expected to more than quadruple from 1.3 million units in 2004 to 5.4 million units in 2020.

China is a very special case in point: its light vehicle production (including commercial vehicles) is expected to increase from about 5.2 million units in 2004 to no less than 12 million units by 2015 and 15 million units by 2020. As far as selling strategies are concerned, there exists a big difference between the local car manufacturers: on the one hand, Chinese manufacturers that are developing production lines are doing so independently, with the aim of exporting their products17. On the other hand, global manufacturers that have set up joint-ventures with Chinese manufacturers are (mainly) producing for the domestic market (Nightingale, 2006:37).

In view of the above, it is hardly surprising that the seaborne vehicle trade has over the years undergone a fundamental geographical shift as well. Whereas today the major seaborne car trades still are Japan-North America, Japan-Europe, Japan-Middle East, South Korea-North America, South Korea-Europe and West Europe-North America, seaborne trades are nowadays increasingly focusing on the developing economies and emerging markets mentioned above. Unsurprisingly, the increasing globalisation trend has also been accompanied by a significant increase in the seaborne shipments of new cars18. It is estimated that, from the total production volume of nearly 65 million new cars in 2005, about 20-25% (i.e. some 15 million units) 19 were exported by ship from their country of manufacture, with the remaining 75-80% sold locally or exported overland. Forecasts for 2015 indicate a worldwide production volume of some 80 million units with overseas exports accounting for nearly 20 million units (excluding transhipment). This figure includes about 16.4 million deepsea units and 3.2 million shortsea units.

The European automotive network, as depicted in Figure 3, demonstrates how the main axes of car assembly and supplier activities are increasingly being complemented by strong developments in the periphery20. Figure 4 depicts a typical production process for CBU (Completely Built Up) cars.

21

European car exports mainly originate from such countries as France, Germany, Spain, the United Kingdom and Belgium.

To conclude, Table 24 provides an overview of the production and overseas exports of new cars for four selected regions in 2005. As this table indicates, both Europe21 and North America took the lead with a production of about 20 million new cars each that year. However, only a relatively small amount of their output was exported overseas. The opposite applies to Japan and South Korea, which produced (far) less new vehicles than Europe and North America but generated much bigger maritime export flows.

 

Table 24: Production and overseas exports of new cars for selected regions (million units in 2005)

 

Europe

Japan

Korea

N America

Production

20.7

10.6

4.2

20.0

Exports

1.8

5.0

4.0

0.4

% N America

64%

35%

30%

-

% Europe

-

25%

40%

45%

% Asia

21%

10%

17%

9%

% S America

3%

7%

-

22%

Source: Isemar (2007)

 

3.1.1.2 The Pure Car and Truck Carrier (PCTC) fleet

22

Before the emergence of PCCs, cars used to be transported by conventional ships, often on top of other (heavier) cargoes, and later on by bulk carriers fitted with car decks that could be folded. However, car carrying capacity was low, the loading/unloading process slow and the risk of damage high (Dynamar, 2006:68).

23

Moreover, in many ports around the world port dues rise significantly when the 200m LOA is exceeded.

Nowadays new and second-hand cars are transported mostly by Pure Car and Truck Carriers or PCTCs, the first of which entered service in 1977 (some ten years later than the first Pure Car Carrier or PCC) 22. By mid-February 2007 the total fleet consisted of 580 vessels with a combined capacity of 2.64m CEU. Just like in many other shipping sectors, the average size of the PCTC fleet is getting bigger and bigger, as indicated by Table 25. Whereas the average PCTC had a capacity of just 4035 CEU in mid-1990, this figure had increased to 4552 CEU (+13%) by mid-February 2007. The lion's share of the PCTC fleet is currently being deployed on liner-type services, i.e. involving fixed routes with a predetermined schedule. Moreover, there is nowadays an increased emphasis on logistics and supply chain management, so that car carrier operators are now required to do more than simply move vehicles between ports (Drewry Shipping Consultants, 2006:45).

At the end of 2006 the largest PCTCs in service had a capacity of 7200 CEU, only to attain the 8000 CEU barrier about half a year later. And the increase in size will probably not stop there: shipyards have reportedly been asked to consider building PCTCs of up to 11000 CEU capacity. While such giant ships would obviously result in significant cost savings on the sea leg (economies of scale), they could well pose serious problems for car terminals designed to handle ships with a maximum LOA of 200m23. In fact, the growing shortfall in the number of ports that have the infrastructure for car capacity, including in Europe, constitutes an important problem for car carrier operators. As a result, some of them have taken control of their own destiny by taking a (significant) stake in RoRo terminals in strategic ports (Nightingale, 2007). The takeover of PSA HNN's RoRo terminals by NYK in early 2007 constitutes a prime example of this. Hence, the parallel with the liner shipping industry, which has also seen increasing investments by shipping lines in (semi-) dedicated facilities in recent years (cf. supra), is striking.

 

Table 25: Composition of the car carrier fleet for selected years

Year

1-1999 CEU

2000-2999 CEU

3000-3999 CEU

4000-4999 CEU

5000-5999 CEU

6000+ CEU

Total fleet

 

ships

cap

ships

cap

ships

cap

ships

cap

ships

cap

ships

cap

ships

cap

avg
size

1990

24

33,800

42

105,800

78

260,400

87

394,900

64

347,600

22

136,500

317

1,279,000

4,035

1995

20

28,900

41

103,600

76

252,300

88

395,300

78

418,100

26

160,300

329

1,358,500

4,129

2000

37

51,089

35

87,675

87

289,535

113

512,147

117

639,617

34

206,810

423

1,786,873

4,224

2005

46

62,842

33

81,490

93

313,686

140

631,706

117

640,215

88

551,200

517

2,281,139

4,412

2006

47

67,338

36

87,890

94

316,979

144

648,683

114

619,875

118

747,040

553

2,487,805

4,499

2007

47

67,338

37

90,090

95

320,879

153

689,223

135

745,275

113

727,140

580

2,639,945

4,552

Source: Fearnleys, All figures refer to the first of July each year, while the 2007 figure refers to mid-February 2007,

As its name implies, the cargo of PCTCs is not limited to new or second-hand cars alone. Broadly speaking, the cargo carried by PCTCs on deepsea routes nowadays typically includes about 50% new or second-hand cars and 50% (better-paying) "high and heavy" or "out of gauge" cargo. The latter is mainly being carried on ballast legs (i.e. on their way back to the car loading areas) and can include a whole myriad of different cargoes such as agricultural machines, construction equipment, wind mills, helicopters, etc. On some trades (e.g. to the Eastern Mediterranean or West-Africa) vast volumes of second-hand cars are shipped.

From a technical point of view the PCTC with 10-14 cargo decks, of which 4 or 5 hoistable ones, is nowadays the true workhorse in the industry. Many of the recently built PCTCs have a ramp capacity of 150 tons or more, clearly reflecting the increasing importance of "high and heavy" cargoes. In contrast to PCTCs, the Pure Car Carrier (PCC) concept is slowly fading away, due to a number of reasons. Firstly, the clear height of their car decks is not high enough to accommodate mono-volume cars or SUVs, which are becoming increasingly popular among consumers. Moreover, PCCs are far less suited than PCTCs to carry the mix of cargo types mentioned above.

24

Of course not all of the 80 million manufactured vehicles will have to be transported overseas. Nevertheless, some industry pundits estimate that the car carrying trades could involve as much as 20 million units by 2010, when China and other emerging markets in Asia are expected to generate substantial regional and global export flows.

25

This is the minimum size considered competitive for long-haul trades.

26

The oldest car carriers in the current world fleet are two units built in 1973. One of them is still used to carry second-hand vehicles from Europe to the Middle East and Africa, while the other is being circulated for sale by its Maltese owners. Car carriers can nowadays indeed continue trading to an age of 30 years or more, because rolling cargo on rubber tyres does not cause much hull damage, coupled with the fact that ballast tanks and engines onboard ships can be renewed. The improved quality of coatings also plays a role in this respect.

27

Out of the 50 or so major car manufacturers worldwide, only five have their own vessels to handle export cargoes, namely Nissan Motor (Nissan Motor Car Carrier), Volkswagen (Volkswagen Logistics), Toyota (Toyofugi), Honda (Act Marine) and Hyundai Motor (Eukor). The size of their ship fleets is, however, not sufficient to meet 100% of their shipment needs, implying that they have to rely on other operators as well. In fact, many car manufacturers have long-standing relationships with PCTC operators.

28

The total export volume of Japanese new cars reached an estimated 5.6 million units in 2006, a substantial 19% increase over 2005. For China, the total export volume of new cars reached about 340,000 units in 2006, a massive 96% increase over 2005. On the import side, China accounted for 229,000 units in 2005, about 40% more than the year before. Contrary to their Japanese or South Korean counterparts, Chinese manufacturers have to rely on foreign car carrier operators for the shipment of vehicles, because local shipping companies only own RoRo vessels that are deployed on coastal routes. This constitutes an important reason behind the plans of China to establish its own car carrier fleet, although this will take a number of years to materialize.

In order to keep up with an expected annual 2% growth in vehicle manufacturing in the coming decade (to reach an estimated 80 million units by 2015), many operators have invested heavily in the expansion of their ship fleets24. At the end of 2006 about 570 car carriers with a capacity of at least 1000 car equivalent units (CEU) were being deployed on worldwide trade routes (never before was the fleet so big) for a combined capacity of about 2.6 million CEU. At that time, a further 160-180 units were on order for delivery during 2007-2010, for a total capacity of nearly 1 million CEU. In recent years prices for PCTC newbuildings have increased steadily: the typical price tag for a 6500 CEU unit ordered at established Japanese or South Korean yards nowadays reaches about USD 75-80 million, while this was just USD 55 million a few years ago. However, shipyards in emerging markets such as Vietnam (Vinashin) or India (Pipavav) nowadays offer more attractive prices.

Although representing some 35% of the current fleet capacity in CEU terms, it is generally assumed that the 1 million CEU order backlog, which is heavily focused towards 6000+ CEU vessels, will easily be absorbed by the market. Indeed, according to some industry observers the market is nowadays (i.e. early 2007) characterized by a shortage of car carrier tonnage of about 10%. This corresponds with roughly 50 ships in the 2000+ CEU segment25. This tight supply situation has a number of important implications. Firstly, according to some industry observers, shipments of new cars from Japan or South Korea are nowadays being delayed by about 1 month on average. Secondly, the lack of capacity has resulted in the fact that many older vessels, which have reached an age at which they could be scrapped, are actually still trading. In fact, just one single car carrier went to the scrapping yard in 2005, while in 2006 no such ship was scrapped at all.

Because of this extremely low scrapping activity in recent years, the car carrier fleet nowadays counts more than 100 vessels of over 25 years old26. Unsurprisingly, these ships are mainly used to transport second-hand cars, as they do not boast the necessary deck configuration or ramp capacity to carry a mix of vehicles and "high and heavy" cargo. Other important markets for older car carriers are the trades between Japan and New Zealand, between the Mediterranean/North Europe and West Africa, and between the Far East and Middle East. It is generally assumed that the older vessels will gradually be phased out as from 2010 onwards, i.e. after the large newbuildings slated for 2007-2010 delivery have poured into the market.

A final implication of the tight supply situation is the fact that charter rates for car carriers have increased significantly in recent years. Current 12-month charter rates for 5000-6000 CEU units are estimated to be in the USD 30,000-40,000 per day region, i.e. about double the rate level of three years ago. In fact, the increases in newbuild prices and charter rates have been much more pronounced than the increase in freight rates obtained from shippers/manufacturers who, following consolidation in the car manufacturing industry, nowadays have substantial bargaining power vis-à-vis operators27. This fact, combined with spiralling fuel costs, has obviously put PCTC operators under significant pressure in recent times. Yet, as manufacturers are well aware of the current tight supply situation and high fuel costs, they are prepared to put freight rates and bunker clauses back up for discussion at the negotiation table. After all, for many of them ocean transport constitutes a vital part of their global supply chains. In fact, as a result of the tight supply situation at the end of 2006, some car manufacturers have signed longer-term contracts than usual with car carrier operators, in order to safeguard required space (Nightingale, 2007).

 

3.1.1.3 Leading car carrier operators

On the shipping lines side, the industry is dominated by about six major operators based in the Far East and Europe, the largest of them being Japanese NYK (Table 26). This carrier currently has an (owned or controlled) car carrier fleet of some 90 vessels for a combined capacity of some 400,000 CEU and shipped an estimated 3.2 million CEU during 2006, an increase of about 15% compared to 200528. Driving forces behind the growth in NYK cargo volumes were (and still are) the increasing interest from the North American market for fuel-efficient Japanese cars, as well as good sales in Europe and the Middle East. Apart from NYK, other big deepsea players are Mitsui OSK Lines, K-Line, Eukor, Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics and Höegh Autoliners (including Maersk tonnage). These six carriers nowadays directly own about half of the specialist car carrier capacity and operate more than 80% of global fleet capacity (when chartered tonnage is included). Moreover, each of these six companies is also heavily involved in the European shortsea trades (cf. infra). Table 26 also clearly illustrates the dominance of the Japanese "Big Three" (NYK, K-Line and MOL) on the car carrying market. The "Others" line in Table 26 mainly refers to tonnage suppliers. The main players in this segment are Cido Shipping, Ray Car Carriers, Gram Car Carriers, Zodiac Maritime, Vroon and Dyvi. Just like the big operators, these tonnage providers have invested heavily in newbuilding orders in recent years.

In order to supply their global networks, the large vehicle manufacturers are nowadays increasingly obliged to use the services of all these six independent companies, rather than appointing one or two single carriers to carry all their business. In fact, "established relationships from the past have given way to contracts based on the need to supply different trade flows with different carriers. These contracts often imply cargo sharing agreements between carriers" (Drewry Shipping Consultants, 2006:45).

 

Table 26: Leading car carrier operators as at July 2006

Operator

Vessels
owned

Capacity
(CEU)

Vessels
operated

Capacity
(CEU)

NYK

54

264,000

85

393,000

Eukor

24

124,000

>85

>350,000

K-Line

30

145,000

77

344,000

MOL

51

235,000

>70

>320,000

WWL

37

195,000

50

264,000

Hoegh

27

142,000

50

220,000

Others

354

1,212,000

-

-

Total

577

2,359,000

577

2,359,000

Source: Drewry Shipping Consultants (2006)

Another major player in the car carrier industry is Italy-based Grimaldi, which is both an operator and tonnage provider. From a geographical point of view, Grimaldi is a special case in point in that it currently mainly focuses on the Mediterranean-North Europe, intra-Mediterranean, Europe-West Africa and Europe-East Coast South America trade routes. As such, it has not (yet) ventured outside the Atlantic for vehicle transport. Secondly, United European Car Carriers (UECC) and K-Line European Sea Highway Service (KESS) are peculiar cases as they are heavily involved in the shorter-haul feedering business for the main deepsea operators (see below). So also here a parallel with the container liner industry can be drawn.

From an operational point of view, in the mid-nineties a fleet of 25-30 ships was regarded as the threshold needed to have the scale and flexibility to serve the car manufactures. The general expectation is that this figure will have tripled to around 80 units by 2010. This probably constitutes an important reason behind the recent team-up between Höegh Autoliners and AP Moller Maersk, which involves a joint commercial management of their respective fleets. The combined Höegh and Maersk fleet consists of 55 + 12 vessels (including chartered tonnage), with a further 15 units to be delivered during the next couple of years. Höegh Autoliners carried about 1.8 million CEU in 2006, of which some 65% consisted of new cars. While the AP Moller Maersk Line fleet (consisting of small 2500 CEU and mid-sized 4800 CEU units) is currently chartered out to Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics, NYK and Mitsui OSK Lines, it is expected that most of the vessels will join the Höegh fleet once their charter commitments expire.

 

3.1.1.4 Vehicle trades in Europe

29

The Russian vehicle market is expected to reach 2 million units by 2010. The port of Kotka in Finland is increasingly being used as the gateway to Russia, with vehicles being transported to St-Petersburg and Moscow. In fact, Kotka is one of the seven strategic ports where Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics operates its own terminals, next to Zeebrugge, Southampton, Liverpool, Baltimore, Brunswick and Port Hueneme (the latter three being located in the United States of America).

30

As a matter of fact, demand for new cars in Russia is so high that in the course of 2006 a number of modern RoRo vessels of Transfennica were grabbed by UECC. They are now being converted to shortsea car carriers.

31

The port of Copenhagen/Malmö (CMP) is rapidly developing as a Nordic hub for cars. The volume of new cars handled at CMP terminals increased from 160,000 units in 2003 to no less than 350,000 units in 2005. This represents an average annual increase of nearly 50%.

32

In North America, the main ports of call for new and second-hand vehicle trades include New York (1 million units in 2005), Fraserport (Canada), Baltimore, Portland, Jacksonville, Brunswick, Los Angeles, Port Hueneme and Long Beach. In the Far East, the principal hub ports are Hong Kong, Laem Chabang (Thailand), Sriracha (Thailand), Singapore, Shanghai, Tianjin, Yokohama and Toyohashi.

As far as the European market is concerned, maritime transport of cars is expected to increase steadily over the years to come, following stable or slightly increasing demand for cars in the mature Northwest European market coupled with strong growth in Russia29, Eastern Europe and Turkey. This latter aspect is expected to boost the import flow of cars in ports in the Baltic and the Black Sea. It will also be to the benefit of intra-European shortsea carriers, because many ports in the Baltic or the Black Sea currently dispose of insufficient draught to handle the large PCTCs, such that they have to be served by transhipment via large ports in the Mediterranean such as, for example, Gioia Tauro. Similarly, Russian volumes30 could be transshipped via Bremerhaven in Germany to, e.g., Kotka in Finland. Of course, this picture would change drastically when car manufacturers would decide to establish factories in Eastern Europe and Russia.

As outlined above, the leading deepsea car carrier operators are also heavily involved in the intra-European shortsea trades. Examples include United European Car Carriers (UECC) which is jointly owned by Wallenius and NYK; K-Line European Sea Highway Service (KESS); Autoliners SAS (a subsidiary of Höegh Autoliners); Euro Marine Carriers (in which Höegh has a minority share); and the European shortsea operations by MOL. This combination of deepsea and regional service provision is part of the general trend towards the "one stop shop/total service logistics package" which operators now have to provide to vehicle manufacturers to retain their business (Drewry Shipping Consultants, 2006).

In more mature European markets, for example the English Channel traffic, car carriers are nowadays facing very strong competition from traditional RoRo operators (such as Cobelfret from Belgium), although the RoRo operators' main business still remains the transport of trucks, trailers and mafis so their ships have relatively limited car capacities. Cobelfret is a particular case in point. Following the commissioning of the massive 4600 lanem PAULINE in 2006, coupled with a consolidation of its terminal interests (Cobelfret owns terminals in Purfleet, Killingholme, Rotterdam, Zeebrugge and Vlissingen), the company can remain ahead of competition from other RoRo operators, as well as feeder lines and shortsea car carriers (ShipPax Information, 2007).

Table 27 provides an overview of the main European ports handling new and second-hand cars. In some of these ports, car carrier operators have invested in dedicated hub terminals from which other destinations are feederised, although a typical roundtrip for a large PCTC nowadays still counts five or six ports in Europe. Apart from the ports listed in Table 27, other important car handling ports which receive regular PCTC calls are Livorno (Leghorn), Flushing (Vlissingen), Vigo, Valencia, Piraeus, Koper, Santander, Göteborg, Copenhagen/Malmö31, Marseilles, Pasajes, Almeria, Rotterdam, Ghent and Cuxhaven. Some of these ports are situated in close proximity to car assembly factories of leading manufacturers32.

 

Table 27: Main European vehicle ports in 2005

Port

units (m)

Port

units (m)

Zeebrugge

1.73

Sheerness*

0.67

Bremerhaven

1.65

London*

0.67

Emden

0.86

Grimsby/Immingham

0.62

Antwerp

0.81

Bristol/Portbury

0.60

Barcelona

0.78

Le Havre

0.58

Southampton

0.71

Tyne Ports

0.48

Source: Port Authorities. Various
* 2004 figure

 

3.1.2 Deepsea - Liner trades with RoRo-facilities

From an operational point of view, the ConRo concept (which refers to the carriage of containers and RoRo cargo on one single ship) bears a big resemblance with container liner shipping. Cargoes transported include new and second-hand cars, trucks, "high and heavy" cargo and containers. Important shipping lines in the ConRo market segment are Grimaldi Lines, Delmas/OTAL and Nile Dutch Shipping (NDS).

In the past, the deployment of ConRo vessels was very popular on certain liner trades to the Middle East, West Africa, South America and Russia, where facilities to handle ships were rather limited in certain ports. As for today, the ConRo concept has almost completely faded away on the deepsea routes (e.g. to/from the Middle East). It does, however, still survive on certain Western African and South-American trades (e.g. Grimaldi), as well as in the Levant (Beirut/Tripoli). ConRo vessels are nowadays also being deployed on some shortsea routes, by such carriers as Transfennica (Spliethoff Group) or Cobelfret.

33

Grimaldi Lines ordered five ConRo vessels (25,000 dwt, 800 teu, 2000 cars and 250 trucks) at Hyundai Mipo for a reported USD 430 million in early 2007. The vessels will be delivered in 2010-2011 and come on top of five similar units ordered earlier in Croatia.

Most of today's ConRo vessels were built in the seventies and eighties, so the fleet has reached a relatively high average age. Construction of new vessels has come to an almost complete standstill as, with the exception of Grimaldi Lines (Naples) (which also owns transatlantic ConRo line ACL), nobody seems willing to invest in new tonnage33. This has led to a decreased presence of ConRo tonnage on liner trades.

Grimaldi Lines also has a number of dedicated terminals around Europe suited to handle ConRo cargoes, e.g. in Naples, Antwerp and Hamburg. To conclude, it should be mentioned that the United States (for their Naval Reserve Fleet) have absorbed quite a number of ConRo vessels from the market, to deploy them in times of international conflict.

 

3.1.3 Shortsea - Ferries

Whereas in the past the main income of ferry operators was related to the transport of passengers (income could typically be broken down into 35-40% "passengers", 35-40% "duty free" and 25-30% "freight"), this picture has undergone a fundamental change in recent years. First of all, ferry operators have been and are still faced with increasing competition from low-cost airlines (which nowadays offer cheap flights throughout entire Europe) and passenger and freight services between the Continent and the UK via the Channel Tunnel. This was compounded by the abolishment of duty-free sales onboard ferries in Europe on 1 July 1999, which resulted in a substantial loss of passenger traffic. On the other hand, freight transport in Europe has enjoyed very high growth rates in recent years.

In view of the above, it is not surprising to see that many ferry operators have felt the need to substitute passenger space for freight space onboard their vessels. As a case in point, SeaFrance's latest ferries nowadays carry about 120 trucks per voyage between Calais and Dover, compared to 40-50 for vessels of a previous generation. Another example is the Travemünde-Trelleborg service operated by TT-Line. After the abolishment of duty-free sales, TT-Line decided to order new ships with a higher focus on freight and with only very basic passenger facilities (in the past passenger facilities onboard TT-Line ships were much more developed). In addition, Stena Line decided to have its cruise-ferries on the Kiel-Göteborg link rebuilt, to allow for an increase in the freight capacity and a more flexible exploitation of passenger facilities (e.g. less crew in the Winter season and more crew in the Summer holiday season). Another case in point is ferry operator Finnlines, who is introducing ferries with a freight capacity of about 4200 lanemetre and several hundred passengers on the link between Travemünde (North Germany) and Finland. These ferries will temporarily be the largest ferries deployed on European trade routes.

Hence, the general tendency in today's ferry market is clear - an increasing focus on freight (which has indeed now become the main revenue for most ferry operators in Europe) rather than passengers. Having said this, however, passenger transport still remains a very important business for certain ferry operators on certain markets. A prime example of this is the Sweden-Finland link. Another exception to the increasing focus on freight is formed by the "cruise-ferries" which only carry about 1300-1500 lanemetre of freight. As an example we can mention the cruise ferries of Color Line deployed between Kiel (Germany) and Oslo.

In addition to the traditional services in Northern and Western Europe, another market worth mentioning is the Mediterranean, which has witnessed a tonnage rejuvenation in recent years. The traffic is very much "North-South" oriented rather than "East-West", with large ferries being deployed on services linking e.g. Northern Italy with Sicily, Italy with Greece, and France with Corsica or North Africa. Service speed is a crucial issue in these markets, and several ferry operators are nowadays deploying conventional RoPax vessels with speeds of up to 30 knots. To some extent, this phenomenon of fast conventional RoPax ferries is being copied in Northern Europe. As a case in point, Color Line will soon be introducing fast conventional vessels replacing ageing passenger RoRo vessels on services linking Denmark with Norway.

Finally, other important ferry links are Germany/Sweden, Denmark/Sweden, England-Wales/Ireland, England/Scandinavia, Calais/Dover, Valencia/Barcelona to the islands and North Africa, Marseilles/Corsica and North Africa, Sicily/Sardinia, Greece, the Adriatic Sea and Tunisia/Algeria/Morocco. Generally speaking, all these markets are being characterized by an increasing focus on freight transport (and thus a reduced focus on passenger transport), less duty-free sales and the deployment of faster and more modern ships.

Table 28 provides an overview of world ferry traffic in 2005 for passengers and three types of cargo. As this table indicates, Europe accounts for about one third of global passenger traffic by ferries, but its share of commercial ferry cargoes is much higher. The Baltic is a very important market for car and bus traffic, while the North Sea area is the dominant geographical region for trailer traffic.

 

Table 28: World ferry traffic in 2005

Area

Passengers

Cars

Buses

Trailers

Trips

Baltic

187,182,008

67,816,38

305,106

6,926,465

3,569,383

Mediterranean

192,195,725

26,551,362

85,131

6,578,501

351,432

North Sea

131,772,903

18,786,155

275,265

10,100,708

315,830

Subtotal Europe

511,150,636

113,153,898

665,502

23,605,674

4,236,645

Rest of world

883,964,931

43,295,710

86,015

4,878,016

1,404,400

World total

1,395,115,567

156,449,608

751,517

28,483,690

5,641,045

Share of Europe

36.6%

72.3%

88.6%

82.9%

75.1%

Source: ShipPax Statistics & Outlook 2006

 

At 01/01/2006, the total number of ferries amounted to 1,162 units, with a combined capacity of 1.16 million passengers (of which some 320,000 accommodated in cabins), 266,210 cars or 769,210 lanemetres of commercial vehicles. The fleet had a combined Gross Tonnage (GT) of 12,816,377 GT and an average age of 21 years. As Table 29 indicates, the top-15 European ferry operators accounted for just over half the GT of the total ferry fleet.

 

Table 29: Top-15 European ferry operators at 01/01/2006

Company

Total GT

Company

Total GT

DFDS Group

925,167

Scandlines

349,274

Stena

834,359

Tallink

347,914

P&O

572,082

ANEK Lines

328,243

Tirrenia di Navigazione

549,565

Silja Line

317,313

Grandi Navi Veloci

443,181

SNCM Ferryterranee

264,645

Color Line

424,613

Viking Line

246,032

Superfast Ferries

388,184

Total top-15

6,740,270

Trasmediterranea

381,405

Total ferry fleet

12,816,377

Minoan Lines

368,293

Share of top-15

52.6%

Source: ShipPax Statistics & Outlook 2006

 

3.1.4 Shortsea - Unaccompanied freight transport

The market for unaccompanied freight transport, the fourth of the RoRo markets discussed here, is "booming business" for all players involved in it, and for most geographical regions is being characterized by scale increases (larger vessels), a shortage of vessels and a rather old age profile of the fleet. Vessels active in these trades are only allowed to carry a maximum of 12 drivers.

The market for unaccompanied freight transport is of crucial importance to many ports in Scandinavia, through which substantial

volumes of paper and forest products from local manufacturers (such as Stora Enso, UPM Kymmene, SCA or Norske Skog) are exported. Many of these export cargoes are loaded on mafis and then transported via RoRo vessels to destinations all across Europe. However, in order to reduce their dependency on pure RoRo freight, many shipping lines also increasingly reserve space for containers, for example for northbound cargoes going back to Scandinavia (e.g. 600-700 teu on the new Transfennica vessels). Important shipping lines in the Scandinavian RoRo market include DFDS Tor Line, Transfennica (Spliethoff Group) and Finnlines.

Another major market for unaccompanied RoRo freight transport is the North Sea, for example from Benelux ports (Rotterdam (Europoort and Hoek van Holland), Flushing, Zeebrugge and Ostend) to ports along the Humber and Thames (Hull, Killingholme, Dartford, Purfleet, Dagenham and Immingham). Other important UK ports are the so-called "Haven Ports" of Felixstowe (Norfolkline), Harwich (Stena Line) and Ipswich (Ferryways). On the North Sea market, containerized cargo is playing an increasingly important role (e.g. Cobelfret already carries more containers than trailers on some of its North Sea services). Without a doubt, the container will increase its penetration on other trade routes than the North Sea as well.

In contrast to the two above-mentioned markets (i.e. Scandinavia and North Sea), the market between North Europe and the Mediterranean is a very difficult market for unaccompanied RoRo transport, due to the very heavy competition from road transport. As a matter of fact, volumes on the North Europe to Mediterranean trade are nowadays not yet sufficient for a cost-effective exploitation of services with a high frequency (which is a crucial aspect if one wants to compete head-on with road transport). As a result, services on this trade route are only viable if they enjoy financial support such as under the "Motorways of the Seas" programme of the European Commission.

Finally we have the intra-Mediterranean market, but this market is nowadays more focussed towards RoPax vessels, while trailer transport is only of secondary importance. In the intra-Mediterranean market, UN RORO offers very specific concepts between Italy and Turkey (2 RoRo sailings per day between Trieste and Istanbul).

 

3.2 RoRo traffic handled in European seaports

Table 30 provides an overview of RoRo traffic handled in a selection of European seaports. The table was drawn from a large Eurostat database containing about 260 ports handling RoRo traffic, for a total throughput of 415 million tons in 2005. However, for the present Report we have limited ourselves to those seaports which handled at least 200,000 tons of RoRo traffic. This resulted in a total ports sample of about 160 individual ports spread across 22 different countries, as shown in Table 30. Their combined RoRo throughput amounted to 407 million tons in 2005, effectively representing 98% of the total RoRo throughput of the 260 ports in the Eurostat database.

As can be seen from Table 30, ports in the United Kingdom handled nearly 100 million tons of RoRo traffic in 2005, i.e. about one quarter of the total RoRo traffic handled in European seaports. Next, with a total traffic of more than 50 million tons, Italy is also a major import/export country for RoRo cargo in Europe, although none of its ports handled more than 8 million tons of RoRo traffic in 2005. Other important players on the European RoRo handling scene are Sweden, Germany, Belgium, Denmark, France, Greece, Spain, the Netherlands, Finland and Ireland, each handling more than 0 million tons in 2005. Between them, these 12 countries handled about 391 million tons of RoRo traffic in 2005, giving them a combined market share of nearly 95%.

On an individual port basis, the biggest RoRo port in Europe is Dover, with a total traffic of more than 20 million tons in 2005. This represents about 5% of the combined RoRo throughput of the 260 ports in the Eurostat database. Other major RoRo ports, handling more than 10 million tons per year, include Calais (France), Zeebrugge (Belgium), Lübeck (Germany), Immingham (UK), Rotterdam (the Netherlands), Trelleborg and Göteborg (Sweden). At the other end of the spectrum, more than 160 European seaports handled less than 1 million tons of RoRo traffic in 2005.

As Table 30 indicates, the Eurostat database makes a distinction between two kinds of RoRo cargo, namely mobile self-propelled units on the one hand and other (non-self-propelled) RoRo cargo on the other. These two categories correspond to Codes 5 and 6, respectively, as defined in Annex II of Council Directive 95/64/EC of 8 December 995 on statistical returns in respect of carriage of goods and passenger by sea, as modified by Commission Decision 2005/366/EC of March 2005 (see OJ L123 of 17/5/2005 page 5).

The first RoRo category (mobile self-propelled units) includes (1) road goods vehicles and accompanying trailers, (2) passenger cars, motorcycles and accompanying trailers/caravans, (3), passenger buses, (4) trade vehicles (including import/export motor vehicles), (5) live animals on the hoof, and (6) other mobile self-propelled units. The total throughput in the selected European ports amounted to some 243 million tons in 2005. The United Kingdom was by far the market leader with a cargo volume exceeding 50 million tons, followed by Sweden (26.8 million tons), France (22.5 million tons) and Germany (21.4 million tons). On an individual port basis, Dover was by far the biggest port, followed by Calais, Rotterdam, Trelleborg, Lübeck, Rostock and Rodby.

The second RoRo category (non self-propelled cargo) includes (1) unaccompanied road goods trailers and semi-trailers, (2) unaccompanied caravans and other road, agricultural and industrial vehicles, (3) rail wagons, shipborne port-to-port trailers, and shipborne barges engaged in goods transport, and (4) other mobile non-self-propelled units. Here, the total throughput reached about 172 million tons in 2005. The United Kingdom was again by far the market leader with a cargo volume of nearly 50 million tons, followed by Italy (32 million tons), Belgium (20.4 million tons), Germany (15.3 million tons) and Sweden (13.9 million tons). On an individual port basis, Zeebrugge was the biggest port for this type of RoRo cargo, followed by Immingham, Lübeck, London, Göteborg and Genova.

 

Table 30: Overview of RoRo traffic handled in European seaports (2005)

Port

Self-prop,

Other

RoRo total

Port

Self-prop,

Other

RoRo total

Zeebrugge

2,426,461

13,579,949

16,006,410

Palma Mallorca

4,601,149

2,603,848

7,204,997

Oostende

3,827,212

2,360,556

6,187,768

Barcelona

2,707,849

1,145,977

3,853,826

Antwerp

1,893,961

3,484,103

5,378,064

Santa Cruz de Tenerife

376,503

1,291,282

1,667,785

Ghent

75,955

1,007,948

1,083,903

Las Palmas

137,621

1,494,515

1,632,136

Belgium

8,223,589

20,432,556

28,656,145

Cádiz

83,642

1,411,754

1,495,396

Varna

456,369

 

456,369

Algeciras

976,474

49,978

1,026,452

Other Bulgarian ports

85,114

 

85,114

Ceuta

307,380

472,876

780,256

Bulgaria

541,483

0

541,483

Tarragona

593,212

102,218

695,430

Rødby (Færgehavn)

5,240,900

 

5,240,900

Santander

498,525

33,074

531,599

Helsingør (Elsinore)

4,282,510

 

4,282,510

Melilla

133,963

385,235

519,198

Århus

1,818,656

1,551,328

3,369,984

Vigo

471,248

 

471,248

Kalundborg

1,859,567

1,131,520

2,991,087

Málaga

79,193

302,274

381,467

Frederikshavn

2,401,566

243,780

2,645,346

Almería

114,927

260,628

375,555

Esbjerg

93,527

1,667,608

1,761,135

Pasajes

311,016

19,072

330,088

Gedser

1,447,100

 

1,447,100

Alicante

12,363

239,348

251,711

Hirtshals

1,177,068

 

1,177,068

Other Spanish ports

129,340

88,304

217,644

Rønne

174,830

208,427

383,257

Spain

11,534,405

9,900,383

21,434,788

Københavns Havn

216,939

150,564

367,503

Calais

16,555,458

 

16,555,458

Køge

119,506

182,710

302,216

Marseille

491,717

1,475,319

1,967,036

Aabenraa

:

263,873

263,873

Cherbourg

1,456,821

759

1,457,580

Fredericia (Og Shell)

29,088

181,958

211,046

Caen

1,398,724

 

1,398,724

Denmark

18,861,257

5,581,768

24,443,025

Le Havre

1,312,903

174

1,313,077

Lübeck

6,062,021

9,650,269

15,712,290

Dieppe

661,098

 

661,098

Rostock

5,287,150

1,894,134

7,181,284

Nantes Saint-Nazaire

203,747

94,144

297,891

Puttgarden

3,734,777

 

3,734,777

Rouen

239,665

754

240,419

Sassnitz

461,167

2,010,181

2,471,348

Other French ports

149,477

206,265

355,742

Bremerhaven

2,328,577

77,959

2,406,536

France

22,469,610

1,777,415

24,247,025

Kiel

778,573

761,365

1,539,938

Genova

753,985

6,582,507

7,336,492

Emden

1,422,066

 

1,422,066

Livorno

1,822,881

4,944,340

6,767,221

Cuxhaven

289,484

799,050

1,088,534

Olbia

1,056,584

3,849,479

4,906,063

Hamburg

371,069

11,373

382,442

Trieste

1,372,991

1,832,042

3,205,033

Other German ports

644,939

73,516

718,455

Cagliari

270,085

2,757,512

3,027,597

Germany

21,379,823

15,277,847

36,657,670

Palermo

1,065,643

1,689,242

2,754,885

Tallinn

3,099,223

1,637,419

4,736,642

Napoli

1,275,415

1,171,894

2,447,309

Kunda

 

828,149

828,149

Taranto

1,879

2,293,199

2,295,078

Pärnu

 

1,350,663

1,350,663

Ancona

2,057,855

146,509

2,204,364

Vene-Balti

 

218,778

218,778

Civitavecchia

583,360

1,460,334

2,043,694

Estonia

3,099,223

4,035,009

7,134,232

Salerno

1,563,162

294,628

1,857,790

Dublin

4,255,551

4,107,980

8,363,53

Piombino

1,151,119

650,149

1,801,268

Other Irish ports

2,478,816

974,125

3,452,941

Venezia

927,165

583,648

1,510,813

Ireland

6,734,367

5,082,105

11,816,472

Messina

1,209,373

239,705

1,449,078

Pireus

3,247,269

1,525,330

4,772,599

Catania

325,149

760,184

1,085,333

Patras

2,947,729

612,731

3,560,460

Trapani

765,069

176,481

941,550

Igoumenitsa

2,745,158

24,339

2,769,497

Bari

858,241

43,611

901,852

Antirio

2,242,389

 

2,242,389

Brindisi

773,036

35,752

808,788

Rio

2,242,389

 

2,242,389

Porto Torres

144,013

660,624

804,637

Heraklio

934,180

962,944

1,897,124

Termini Imerese

43,842

755,599

799,441

Paloukia Salaminas

1,867,352

 

1,867,352

Ravenna

9,134

529,494

538,628

Perama

1,867,352

 

1,867,352

Monfalcone

74,294

395,180

469,474

Corfu

630,891

574

631,465

Other Italian ports

740,273

125,640

865,913

Megara

382,925

 

382,925

Italy

18,844,548

31,977,753

50,822,301

Rhodes

254,573

23,236

277,809

Dover

20,124,272

540,898

20,665,170

Other Greek ports

260,910

75,785

336,695

Immingham

1,782,985

10,897,124

12,680,109

Greece

19,623,117

3,224,939

22,848,056

London

998,436

7,991,937

8,990,373

Limassol (Lemesos)

118,666

92,044

210,710

Liverpool

2,595,607

3,627,928

6,223,535

Other Cypriotic ports

12,574

281

12,855

Larne

2,830,000

2,599,160

5,429,160

Cyprus

131,240

92,325

223,565

Belfast

1,971,851

2,730,667

4,702,518

Liepaja

437,076

82,762

519,838

Hull

1,151,303

2,751,417

3,902,720

Ventspils

512,073

3,345

515,418

Holyhead

3,088,472

693,987

3,782,459

Other Latvian ports

57

 

57

Portsmouth

2,812,491

910,104

3,722,595

Latvia

949,206

86,107

1,035,313

Harwich

1,510,771

2,117,632

3,628,403

Klaipeda

847,660

851,567

1,699,227

Heysham

466,859

2,841,742

3,308,601

Lithuania

847,660

851,567

1,699,227

Cairnryan

2,186,882

1,087,051

3,273,933

Malta (Valetta)

22,552

181,999

204,551

Felixstowe

236,439

2,633,963

2,870,402

Other Maltese ports

 

698

698

Tees & Hartlepool

172,427

2,468,084

2,640,511

Malta

22,552

182,697

205,249

Ramsgate

1,618,105

224,371

1,842,476

Rotterdam

9,599,793

1,380,999

10,980,792

Fleetwood

563,524

1,071,611

1,635,135

Scheveningen

3,328,675

 

3,328,675

Southampton

1,451,730

99,576

1,551,306

Vlissingen

1,735,405

 

1,735,405

Stranraer

1,046,564

118,538

1,165,102

Amsterdam

309,873

14,411

324,284

Milford Haven

535,679

541,047

1,076,726

Other Dutch ports

191,908

 

191,908

Ipswich

98,593

968,885

1,067,478

Netherlands

15,165,654

1,395,410

16,561,064

Poole

813,492

226,405

1,039,897

Swinoujscie

2,239,819

489,760

2,729,579

Warrenpoint

87,253

766,250

853,503

Gdynia

1,022,976

530,024

1,553,000

Bristol

718,955

123,253

842,208

Other Polish ports

124,916

70,548

195,464

Tyne

649,766

165,726

815,492

Poland

3,387,711

1,090,332

4,478,043

Fishguard

380,015

133,310

513,325

Setúbal

368,442

3,678

372,120

Forth

256,109

217,830

473,939

Other Portuguese ports

71,240

2,794

74,034

Medway

396,840

 

396,840

Portugal

439,682

6,472

446,154

Aberdeen

24,265

232,018

256,283

Romanian ports

22,579

188,683

211,262

Other UK ports

331,979

127,988

459,967

Romania

22,579

188,683

211,262

United Kingdom

50,901,664

48,908,502

99,810,166

Slovenian ports

20,266

8,380

28,646

Split

628,705

534

629,239

Slovenia

20,266

8,380

28,646

Other Croatian ports

49,225

928

50,153

Helsinki

2,129,028

2,905,656

5,034,684

Croatia

677,930

1,462

679,392

Turku

1,388,132

1,456,548

2,844,680

Stavanger Ports*

2,039,775

253,661

2,293,436

Hanko

949,024

1,342,313

2,291,337

Haugesund Ports*

1,314,947

37,607

1,352,554

Naantali

1,996,235

80,542

2,076,777

Oslo

534,271

678,690

1,212,961

Hamina

22,555

331,616

354,171

Porsgrunn Ports*

208,048

352,526

560,574

Kotka

82,621

188,496

271,117

Larvik

455,376

 

455,376

Uusikaupunki

23,734

210,994

234,728

Kristiansand S

283,679

105,300

388,979

Vaasa

153,533

66,592

220,125

Sandefjord

298,279

 

298,279

Other Finnish ports

7,178

90,960

98,138

Other Norwegian ports

287,443

300,908

588,351

Finland

6,752,040

6,673,717

13,425,757

Norway

5,421,818

1,728,692

7,150,510

Trelleborg

7,554,054

3,003,534

10,557,588

       

Göteborg

3,248,685

6,948,616

10,197,301

       

Helsingborg

3,824,864

616,098

4,440,962

       

Malmö

2,806,163

1,077,756

3,883,919

       

Stockholm

1,660,304

1,033,197

2,693,501

       

Kappelskär

2,481,841

101,380

2,583,221

       

Ystad

1,957,836

501,204

2,459,040

       

Karlshamn

881,551

279,631

1,161,182

       

Karlskrona

931,836

32,551

964,387

       

Nynäshamn (ports)

442,177

252,658

694,835

       

Varberg

658,788

6,136

664,924

       

Umeå

217,515

11,375

228,890

       

Other Swedish ports

105,166

64,013

169,179

       

Sweden

26,770,780

13,928,149

40,698,929

Total all ports

242,822,204

172,432,270

415,254,474

Source: Eurostat

 

Overview of main developments in the European RoRo market during 2006

Development of the RoRo fleet in 2006

  • According to Clarkson Research Services Ltd, the total RoRo fleet (including RoRo/Freight/Passenger vessels, RoRo/LoLo vessels, full-RoRo vessels, ConRo vessels and PC(T)Cs) reached 1673 units at the end of 2006 for a combined capacity of 18.13 million dwt. This represents a 4.8% increase compared to the beginning of the year (1618 vessels for 17.3 million dwt). The combined orderbook for all above-mentioned vessel types at the end of 2006 counted 226 vessels for a combined capacity of some 3.5 million dwt. Only a handful of RoRo vessels were sent to the scrapyards during 2006.
  •  

    Port/terminal development in Europe (non-exhaustive)

  • Despite declaring that its core interests when acquiring Hesse-Noord Natie (HNN) in 2002 were Containers and RoRo traffic, PSA reached an agreement with NYK at the end of 2006 regarding the transfer of the RoRo activities of PSA HNN to NYK. The agreement concerns both the terminal operations (one terminal in Antwerp and two in Zeebrugge) and the PDI activities. The take-over fits in NYK's strategy to develop existing port infrastructure and thus ensure the continuity of maritime vehicle transport. The deal was officially concluded in mid-February 2007 and the new company will operate under the name International Car Operators (ICO). The terminals in Zeebrugge and Antwerp handled a combined volume 1.3 million units in 2006.
  • Grimaldi Naples is reportedly looking to strengthen its RoRo terminal activities in the Mediterranean. Existing terminals in Civitavecchia, Monfalcone, Salerno and Valencia are involved, as well as a new facility in Barcelona. Apart from these Mediterreanean terminals, Grimaldi also has stakes in RoRo/multipurpose terminals in Antwerp (Antwerp Euro Terminal, its North European hub) and Hamburg (through an early-2007 acquired 49% stake in HHLA's Unikai terminal).
  • DFDS Tor Line switched most of its operations in Immingham (UK) to the Nordic Riverside Terminal at the Immingham Outer Port, for which they have a 25-year exclusive use. Vanuden RoRo reportedly intends to use this terminal as its hub for Scandinavia/Baltic cargo on its RoRo/multipurpose service between Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean.
  • Hafen-Entwicklungsgesellschaft Rostock developed the berth 60 on the Warnow quay into a RoRo berth by removing the old container bridges at the site (January-August 2006).
  • In April, 2006, CCI Boulogne announced a '20m investment in a new RoRo berth, due into service in June 2007, dedicated to fast jet cargo carriers.
  • In early 2006 the ports of Dover and Calais announced plans to cater for major increases in RoPax ferry traffic, estimated at around '200m and '300-400m respectively. Dover handled a record > 2m freight vehicles in 2005. Calais, which accounted for 1.6m heavy-goods vehicles that year, plans to create a new outer port. Apart from catering for more Dover-Calais traffic, the port authority (CCI Calais) wants to diversify and attract new (unaccompanied) RoRo services from Spain, the Baltic, etc. The new development will be directly rail-linked. In 2006 the port of Calais invested effectively in the new facilities and improved the security and safety measures to meet the demands of the ferry operators and their customers. The port achieved a record throughput of 1,847,197 trucks in 2006.
  • In the port of Bilbao, vehicle handling company Termicar Bilbao moved to a new site in the Bilbao Outer Abra zone. The new terminal boasts a 900m quay length and two ramps for RoRo vessels. It comprises a 27ha yard and has rail and road connections.
  • The Port of Warnemunde commissioned a new passenger terminal in May 2006, complementing the existing Warnemunde Cruise Center.
  • Similarly, the port of Sillamae (Estonia) commissioned a new passenger terminal in August 2006.
  •  

    Other significant developments (non-exhaustive)

  • Generally speaking, trailer traffic is expected to increase by some 4-5% per year in the established markets, with even higher growth rates in the emerging markets. According to some observers, this might well lead to orders for 7500+ lanem vessels in the not too distant future. This will obviously have massive implications for port facilities handling them.
    • Although 2006 saw the contracting of the world's biggest RoPax (2 x 5500 lanem vessels for Stena Line) and cruise vessels (Royal Caribbean's "Genesis" class), shipyards in the Far East currently have such huge order backlogs for other types of tonnage (notably container vessels and dry and liquid bulk carriers) that their interest in building RoPax and cruise vessels has vanished. Moreover, the number of manufacturing locations for large and medium-speed engines (which are crucial to the ferry market) have been reduced to just three, creating a capacity bottleneck. As a result, there is currently a 36-month lead-time between contract signing and vessel delivery in the RoRo segment.
    • SeaContainers, the once giant passenger shipping company, was dissolved in 2006. Another victim was Fjord Line, which sold off its UK line to DFDS Seaways. On the other hand, Tallink swallowed Silja Line and Superfast's Baltic activities while Grimaldi took control of Finnlines in late 2006. Similarly, LD Lines tendered successfully for the operation hitherto provided by Transmanche Ferries while the service of the already defunct DANE Sea Lines was acquired by Blue Star Ferries.
    • Just like the container industry, the ferry sector aroused an increased interest of risk capitalists and equity funds, casting their eyes on Scandlines, SNCM, Moby Lines and Grandi Navi Veloci. This marks an important change in the history of ferry shipping, where merger and acquisition activity used to take place within the established shipping businesses.
    • Norfolkline (at the time still owned by AP Moller-Maersk) and Flota Suardiaz set up the joint venture Norfolkline-Suardiaz BV in early 2006, with the intention to start a Dunkirk-Northern Spain service with 200-trailer capacity RoRo vessels. For this project the European Commission reserved USD 5.1 million of Marco Polo support. Norfolkline already offers RoRo ferry services between the North Continent and the UK, while Flota Suardiaz started a two-vessel RoRo link between Le Havre, Setubal, Casablanca and Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
    • Cido Car Carriers commenced a monthly southbound RoRo service from Antwerp and Sheerness to East Africa in July 2006, deploying 3000 CEU vessels.
    • Cosco Shipping Company (Coscol) concluded a 15-year contract with no less than 17 Chinese car makers for the carriage of their vehicles worldwide (starting with domestic, Russia, Middle East and Latin America flows). Coscol will substantially invest in a PCC and PCTC fleet expansion.
    • At the RoRo 2006 conference in Ghent (May 2006) Stena Line announced that they would soon commission ConRoPax vessels, i.e. a combination of container feeder vessel (250 TEU) and a 2100 lanem RoRo ship with accommodation for 300 passengers.
    • The AS Tallink Group acquired from Attica (Greece) the 3 x 30 knot RoPax Ferries SUPERFAST VIII, SUPERFAST IX and SUPERFAST X in early 2006, for a total amount of USD 383 million. The route on which the ships are deployed (Hanko-Paldiski-Rostock) is part of the deal.
    • A new Italian domestic RoRo service has been set up between the Port of Augusta, in the south east of Sicily, and the north Adriatic Port of Ravenna in early 2006. Departures will be every four days in each direction. The line has been launched by BMMS Motorway Mediterranean Sea. A chartered vessel, the 193m LOA MAERSK VOYAGER is deployed in the service. The ship has a capacity for approximately 185 unaccompanied trailers and accommodation for up to 12 drivers. Complete vehicles and containers will be accepted, as well as dangerous goods and oversized project cargoes.
    • During 2006 the first steps were undertaken to privatise German/Danish Scandlines AG (at that time still 50% Danish Ministry of Transport / 50% Deutsche Bahn owned). In early 2007 two take-over candidates were still in the running, i.e. venture capitalist 3i and Baltic Freight Ferry Development (comprising Allianz Capital and Deutsche Seereederei). It is unclear when the final decision will be taken. Scandlines AG operates 24 ferries on 12 Baltic RoRo services (in the Denmark-Germany-Sweden triangle and to the Baltic countries) and carried just over 1 million lorry units in 2006, a 3.3% increase compared to the year before. The number of rail wagons decreased 12% to 88,000 units. Scandlines also carried about 20 million passengers and 4.2 million cars in 2006.

    Source: Dynamar (2006, 2007), ShipPax Information (2007) and various trade press articles

     

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    Nach Angaben der Hafenbetreiber von La Spezia sind die Ernennungen der Präsidenten der Hafenbehörde und die Hafenreform weiterhin ins Stocken geraten.
    Nach Angaben der Hafenbetreiber von La Spezia sind die Ernennungen der Präsidenten der Hafenbehörde und die Hafenreform weiterhin ins Stocken geraten.
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    Die Bedeutung der Einführung von Anreizen für grüne E-Fuels wurde unterstrichen
    Im August stieg der Güterverkehr in den Häfen von Genua und Savona-Vado dank der Zunahme der Massengüter um +2,5%
    Genua
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    Chinesische Steuern auf US-Schiffe ab 14. Oktober
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    Im dritten Quartal dieses Jahres wuchs der Güterverkehr in türkischen Häfen um 4,6 %.
    Ankara
    Die Volumina mit Italien stiegen um +7,3 %, wobei die Containerfracht (+32,2 %) stark zunahm
    Die taiwanesischen Unternehmen Evergreen, Yang Ming und WHL verzeichneten starke Umsatzrückgänge im Quartal
    Taipeh/Keelung
    Im Zeitraum Juli-September wurden Rückgänge von -36,7 %, -42,2 % und -35,7 % verzeichnet
    ASA, ECSA, ICS, WSC, ITF, IAPH und IBIA fordern die Genehmigung des Net-Zero-Frameworks
    Brüssel
    Sie betonen, dass nur globale Standards in der Lage sein werden, eine globale Industrie zu dekarbonisieren.
    Zanetti (Confitarma): Sicherstellung der Wettbewerbsfähigkeit der italienischen Rüstungsindustrie mit branchengerechten Förderinstrumenten
    Rom
    Im zweiten Quartal verzeichnete der Güterverkehr in den Häfen von Neapel und Salerno Rückgänge von -5,3 % bzw. -3,2 %
    Neapel
    Kreuzfahrtpassagiere auf dem Vormarsch
    Neue US-Zölle werden in den kommenden Monaten starke Auswirkungen auf Containerimporte in die USA haben
    Washington
    Prognosen der National Retail Federation und Hackett Associates
    Im Jahr 2024 ging der Güterverkehr per Bahn des spanischen Unternehmens RENFE Mercancías um -12,0 % zurück.
    Madrid
    Das Geschäftsjahr endete mit einem Nettoverlust von -32,2 Millionen Euro
    ZIM wird keine Zuschläge für neue US-Steuern auf chinesische Schiffe erheben
    Haifa
    Die neuen US-Zölle treten am 14. Oktober in Kraft.
    ABB verkauft seine Robotik-Sparte für 5,4 Milliarden Dollar an die SoftBank Group Corp.
    Zürich/Tokio
    ABB Robotics beschäftigt rund 7.000 Mitarbeiter
    Federlogistica fordert die Akzeptanz und Umsetzung der Regelung zu Wartezeiten für schwere Fahrzeuge.
    Zehn europäische Bahnverbände fordern Beschleunigung der Fertigstellung des TEN-V-Netzes
    Brüssel
    Die Notwendigkeit, ausreichende Mittel für die Implementierung interoperabler Systeme auf europäischer Ebene sicherzustellen, wurde hervorgehoben
    SAAM Towage schließt Übernahme des gesamten Aktienkapitals der kolumbianischen Intertug ab
    Santiago
    Es wurde eine Vereinbarung unterzeichnet, um die restlichen 30 % zu erhalten
    Im vergangenen August wurde der Suezkanal von 1.070 Schiffen durchquert (-3,3%)
    Im vergangenen August wurde der Suezkanal von 1.070 Schiffen durchquert (-3,3%)
    Kairo/Ismailia
    In den ersten acht Monaten des Jahres 2025 ging der Seeverkehr um -9,4 % zurück
    Hafen von Salerno: Die Arbeiten zur Fertigstellung der "Porta Ovest" werden wieder aufgenommen
    Neapel/Rom
    Cuccaro wird zum Sonderkommissar der Zentraltyrrhenischen Hafenbehörde ernannt. Annunziata tritt zurück.
    Konzessionserneuerung für die kroatische Werft Iskra Shipyard
    Sebenico
    Das Schiffsmaschinenwerk wird auf eine Fläche von 11.000 Quadratmetern erweitert
    Im August wuchs der Güterverkehr im Hafen von Ravenna um +10,9 %
    Ravenna
    Massengut ist auf dem Vormarsch. Sonstige Fracht ist rückläufig.
    Federlogistica hat eine eigene Vertretung auf der Iberischen Halbinsel gegründet
    Genua
    Es wird italienische Unternehmer unterstützen, die in Spanien tätig sind
    Boluda übernimmt die Schlepp- und Bergungsbetriebe von Royal Boskalis in Australien und Papua-Neuguinea.
    Valencia
    Transaktion im Wert von 640 Millionen US-Dollar
    ESPO fordert IMO-Staaten zur formellen Annahme des Net-Zero-Frameworks auf
    Brüssel
    Der Verband fordert die EU-Kommission außerdem auf, europäische Standards anzugleichen
    Der Hafen von Los Angeles plant den Bau eines neuen Containerterminals.
    Los Angeles
    Aufforderung zur Einreichung von Interessenbekundungen
    Im dritten Quartal stieg der Anschlussindex Italiens an das globale Netzwerk für containerisierte Seeverkehrsdienste um +2,7 %.
    Im dritten Quartal stieg der Anschlussindex Italiens an das globale Netzwerk für containerisierte Seeverkehrsdienste um +2,7 %.
    Genf
    Das stärkste Wachstum im PLSCI verzeichnete der Hafen von Savona-Vado Ligure (+53,7 %).
    ONE erhebt keine Zuschläge für neue US-Steuern auf chinesische Schiffe
    Singapur
    Sie werden ab dem 14. Oktober angewendet
    Fincantieri und Aeronautical Service unterzeichnen eine Vereinbarung über die Verwendung von Verbundwerkstoffen im Marine-, Zivil- und Militärsektor.
    Triest
    Konzessionsverlängerung für Hafenterminal Genua bis 2054 genehmigt
    Genua
    Die Betriebsbedingungen des Terminals wurden neu definiert und in Übereinstimmung mit der Entscheidung des Staatsrates und der PRP wieder auf die Mehrzweckfunktion zurückgeführt.
    PSA Italia-Logtainer und Rail Hub Milano-Medlog haben Angebote für die Verwaltung des intermodalen Terminals Interporto Padova eingereicht.
    Padua
    Der Frachtverkehr in chinesischen Seehäfen stieg im letzten Monat um 4,5 %.
    Peking
    Container beliefen sich auf 27,7 Millionen TEU (+6,8%)
    Die Niederlande legen dem Gerichtshof der Europäischen Union die Frage vor, ob die Lascharbeiten auf kleineren Containerschiffen Seeleuten oder Hafenarbeitern anvertraut werden sollen.
    Im zweiten Quartal wuchs der Containerverkehr der Eurokai-Terminals um +16,4 %
    Hamburg
    Deutliches Wachstum von 16,1 % in Deutschland. In Italien (Contship) stiegen die Mengen um 5,2 %.
    China erließ eine Regelung als Reaktion auf die US-Steuern auf in chinesischem Besitz befindliche und in China gebaute Schiffe
    Peking
    Die neuen Regeln sehen die Möglichkeit vor, ähnliche Gegenmaßnahmen einzuführen
    Neuer Angriff auf Schiffe im Golf von Aden
    Southampton
    UKMTO gab bekannt, dass auf einem von einer Granate getroffenen Schiff ein Feuer ausgebrochen sei
    Carnival schließt sein bestes Quartal aller Zeiten ab
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    Miami
    Der amerikanische Kreuzfahrtkonzern kündigt eine weitere Verstärkung des Wachstumstrends bei den Buchungen an
    Marella Cruises verkauft Fincantieri-Slots für zwei neue Kreuzfahrtschiffe an TUI Cruises.
    Hannover/Triest
    Mit einer Bruttotonnage von 160.000 Tonnen werden sie größer sein als die ursprünglich geplanten Einheiten
    Brückenvereinbarung zwischen GNV und Portitalia über Laschvorgänge in den Häfen von Palermo und Termini Imerese
    Palermo
    Das direkte Eingreifen des AdSP-Kommissars Tardino war entscheidend - erklären Filt, Fit und Uilt
    HMM wird keine Zuschläge für neue US-Steuern auf chinesische Schiffe einführen
    Seoul
    Das Unternehmen wird die Liniendienste mit Zwischenstopps in den USA nicht ändern.
    GATX Rail Europe unterzeichnet Sale-Leaseback-Vertrag mit DB Cargo zum Kauf von 6.000 Waggons
    Wien
    Die Transaktion wird bis Ende dieses Jahres abgeschlossen sein.
    Im zweiten Quartal 2025 stieg der Güterumschlag im Hafen Bremen/Bremerhaven um +6,0 %
    Im zweiten Quartal 2025 stieg der Güterumschlag im Hafen Bremen/Bremerhaven um +6,0 %
    Bremen
    Stückgut wächst. Massengut ist rückläufig.
    Indien lanciert ein fast 8 Milliarden Dollar schweres Hilfspaket für den Schiffbau und die maritimen Sektoren
    Neu-Delhi
    Die Produktionskapazität der Werft soll auf 4,5 Millionen Bruttoregistertonnen pro Jahr steigen
    Im zweiten Quartal dieses Jahres ging der Güterverkehr in französischen Häfen um -0,4 % zurück.
    Paris
    Der Handel mit Trockenmassengut und rollenden Massengütern ist rückläufig. Der Handel mit Container- und Flüssigmassengütern nimmt zu.
    Antin Infrastructure Partners übernimmt den führenden Jachthafenbetreiber Großbritanniens
    Paris/London/New York
    Es wird das Eigentum von der britischen Private-Equity-Firma LDC übernehmen
    Royal Caribbean vereinbart mit Meyer Turku eine Kapazitätsvereinbarung für den Bau von Icon-Schiffen für ein Jahrzehnt
    Miami
    Bestellung für ein fünftes Icon-Kreuzfahrtschiff bestätigt und Option auf ein siebtes Schiff der gleichen Serie platziert
    Maersk kündigt an, dass es keine Zuschläge für neue US-Zölle auf chinesische Schiffe erheben wird
    Kopenhagen
    Das Unternehmen versichert, dass es keine Änderungen an seinen Dienstleistungen vornehmen wird
    Cochin Shipyard und KSOE gehen strategische Zusammenarbeit im Schiffbausektor ein
    Neu-Delhi
    Es wird mit der Schaffung von rund zweitausend direkten Arbeitsplätzen gerechnet
    DHL nimmt den Frachtversand von Deutschland in die USA für Firmenkunden wieder auf.
    Bonn
    Sie waren aufgrund der Abschaffung der "De-minimis"-Schwelle für Waren mit einem Wert unter 800 Dollar in den USA ausgesetzt worden.
    Erklärung des Weltwirtschaftsrats für nachhaltige Entwicklung zur Unterstützung des Netto-Null-Rahmenwerks der IMO
    Ancona: Steuerbetrug im Schiffbausektor
    Ancona
    Über 2,3 Millionen Euro an nicht existierenden Steuergutschriften beschlagnahmt
    CMA CGM übernimmt britischen Güterbahnbetreiber Freightliner
    Birmingham
    Die Transaktion wird Anfang 2026 abgeschlossen sein
    Der Containerfrachtverkehr im Hafen von Algeciras ging im letzten Monat um 9,4 % zurück.
    Algeciras
    Die umgeschlagenen 20-Fuß-Container betrugen 399 Tausend (-0,7%)
    Italferr beteiligt sich an Europas größtem Eisenbahnelektrifizierungsauftrag
    Rom
    Aktivitäten im Rahmen des Rail Baltica-Projekts
    Der Güterverkehr in den Häfen von Barcelona und Valencia nahm im August zu
    Barcelona/Valencia
    In den ersten acht Monaten des Jahres 2025 wurden Rückgänge von -1,6 % bzw. -0,3 % verzeichnet
    Im Juni-August-Quartal stiegen die Umsätze des FedEx Express-Kurierdienstes um +3,1 %
    Memphis
    Durchschnittlich wurden 16,8 Millionen Expresssendungen pro Tag abgefertigt (+3,5%)
    Durchschlag im Erkundungsstollen des Brenner Basistunnels
    Mailand/Rom
    Mit 64 Kilometern wird es die längste unterirdische Eisenbahnverbindung der Welt sein.
    Ausschreibung für die Privatisierung der kroatischen Werft 3. MAJ Rijeka 1905 gestartet
    Zagreb
    Das Startgebot liegt bei 6,66 Millionen Euro.
    Um die CO2-Emissionen zu senken, sollte die Schifffahrt mit anderen Sektoren zusammenarbeiten, deren CO2-Emissionen nur schwer gesenkt werden können.
    London
    Dies wird durch einen Bericht von Accelleron unterstrichen, in dem davon ausgegangen wird, dass eine kritische Nachfragemasse erforderlich ist, um eine Pattphase zu überwinden.
    COSCO beruhigt Kunden hinsichtlich der Auswirkungen der neuen US-Zölle auf chinesische Schiffe
    Shanghai
    Wir – so versicherte das chinesische Unternehmen – werden wettbewerbsfähige Frachtraten und Zuschläge beibehalten.
    Die Schifffahrt ist noch weit vom Ziel entfernt, bis 2030 5-10 % des verbrauchten Kraftstoffs aus skalierbaren, emissionsfreien Quellen zu beziehen.
    Kopenhagen
    Die Notwendigkeit der Einführung von Anreizen wurde unterstrichen
    Das spanische Unternehmen Boluda übernimmt die intermodalen Schienengüterverkehrsdienste von Transfesa.
    Valencia
    Die Vereinbarung umfasst außerdem Industriedienstleistungen, Eisenbahnwartungs- und Rangiertätigkeiten sowie intermodale Terminals.
    Til (MSC Group) wird Anteilseigner am türkischen Containerhafen Petkim
    Til (MSC Group) wird Anteilseigner am türkischen Containerhafen Petkim
    Baku
    Abkommen mit dem aserbaidschanischen Ölkonzern SOCAR
    Deutsche und österreichische Anhängerhersteller stellen EU-Verordnung zur Reduzierung der Umweltbelastung durch Lkw in Frage
    Berlin/Brüssel
    Sie prangern an, dass seine Anwendung zu einem Anstieg des Verkehrsaufkommens und damit zu höheren Emissionen führt.
    Der Bahnhof Venedig Marghera wurde mit einem Gleis ausgestattet, das den europäischen TEN-T-Standards entspricht
    Venedig
    Ein 740 Meter langes Gütergleis wurde eröffnet.
    World Shipping Council startet Frachtsicherheitsprogramm zur Verhinderung von Schiffsbränden
    Washington
    Es basiert auf künstlicher Intelligenz und traditionellen Wareninspektionen
    Rheinmetall steigt durch Übernahme von Naval Vessels Lürssen in den Marineschiffbau ein
    Bremen
    Lürssen Group konzentriert sich auf Megayacht-Produktion
    Der Containerverkehr im Hafen von Hongkong ging im dritten Quartal um -9,2 % zurück
    Hongkong
    Im September wurde ein Rückgang von 16,3 % verzeichnet
    Der Hafen von Civitavecchia ernennt Mitglieder des Marine Resources Partnership Body
    Civitavecchia
    Er bleibt vier Jahre im Amt
    Neuer Quartalsrekord für den Containerverkehr der CMPort-Hafenterminals
    Hongkong
    Neue Höchststände sowohl in China als auch in Überseehäfen verzeichnet
    CMA CGM bestellt sechs Feeder-Containerschiffe bei der Cochin Shipyard
    Kochi
    Auftragswert rund 300 Millionen Dollar
    In Frankreich werden effiziente Lösungen für den Hafeneinlauf schwimmender Windkraftanlagen untersucht
    Trondheim/Brest
    Vereinbarung zwischen der norwegischen BOA und dem Hafen von Brest
    Augusta Due hat einen zweiten neuen Tanker erworben, der von Fujian Southeast Shipbuilding Co. gebaut wurde.
    Rom
    Es verfügt über eine Tragfähigkeit von 18.590 Tonnen.
    IRU, CLECAT, ESC und GCCA lehnen verbindliche Ziele für die Nachfrage nach emissionsfreien Lkw ab
    Brüssel
    Sie fordern, sich stattdessen auf die Schaffung günstiger Bedingungen für die Betreiber zu konzentrieren, damit diese diese nutzen können.
    Marialaura Dell'Abate ist die neue Präsidentin der Gruppe junger Reeder von Confitarma.
    Rom
    Im dritten Quartal wuchs der Güterverkehr in russischen Häfen um +4 %
    Sankt Petersburg
    Nur die Importmengen nehmen ab
    Matteo Caiti wird Country Manager für Italien bei Forto
    Mailand
    Ziel ist die Konsolidierung des Wachstums auf dem italienischen Markt
    DP World baut und betreibt multimodales Terminal in Usbekistan
    Dubai
    Joint Venture mit Tashkent Invest
    Confitarma begrüßt die Zustimmung des Senats zu Vereinfachungsmaßnahmen für den Seeverkehrssektor.
    Rom
    Eine schnelle Zustimmung in der Kammer wird ebenfalls erhofft
    Ab sofort können Anträge auf Förderungen für den Schienengüterverkehr gestellt werden.
    Rom
    Ab heute können Sie auf den Ferrobonus zugreifen
    Der See-, Hafen- und Logistiksektor bittet das Verkehrsministerium um Klarstellung der Regelung zu Wartezeiten beim Be- und Entladen von Gütern
    Rom
    Es wurde ein Dialog einberufen, um die Identifizierung der korrekten Anwendungshinweise des Gesetzes zu bestimmen
    In Finnland werden vier Eisbrecher für die US-Küstenwache gebaut.
    Washington
    Abkommen von den Präsidenten Donald Trump und Alexander Stubb unterzeichnet
    PSA International gewinnt die Auszeichnung "Bester singapurischer Investor in Italien".
    Genua
    Es wurde von der italienischen Handelskammer in Singapur verliehen
    Das Schiff Olterra der italienischen Marine wurde in Genua vom Stapel gelassen.
    Genua
    Es handelt sich um das erste militärische Projekt der T. Mariotti-Werft
    Die erste Fähre der Region Sizilien wurde in Palermo in Betrieb genommen
    Palermo
    Folgiero: Revitalisierung der sizilianischen Werft als Teil des neuen Industrieplans von Fincantieri
    Im dritten Quartal stieg die Zahl der von OOCL-Schiffen beförderten Container um +0,7 %
    Hongkong
    Verstärkung des Umsatzrückgangs, der um -25,9 % zurückging
    Assologistica verabschiedet neue Regeln zum Palettentausch
    Rom
    Nach der Genehmigung durch den Senat wird der Text an die Abgeordnetenkammer weitergeleitet.
    Offshore-Windpark im Hafen von Augusta in zwei bis drei Jahren fertig
    Palermo
    Di Sarcina: Wir sind zuversichtlich, dass die geplanten Mittel in Höhe von rund 50 Millionen Euro zügig bereitgestellt werden.
    In den Niederlanden wurde einem selbstfahrenden Schiff die Erlaubnis erteilt, außerhalb eines Sperrgebiets zu fahren.
    Rotterdam
    Deutsches Unternehmen Helsing übernimmt Blue Ocean Monitoring
    London
    Australisches Unternehmen baut selbstfahrende U-Boote
    NÄCHSTE ABFAHRSTERMINE
    Visual Sailing List
    Abfahrt
    Ankunft:
    - Alphabetische Liste
    - Nationen
    - Geographische Lage
    Das Dekret, mit dem der Hafen von Taranto zum nationalen Offshore-Wind-Zentrum erklärt wird, wurde offiziell in Kraft gesetzt.
    Tarent
    Gugliotti: Ressourcen für die Modernisierung und Aufwertung von Hafengebieten freisetzen
    Einer der beiden verletzten Seeleute des im Golf von Aden angegriffenen Schiffes ist gestorben
    Amsterdam/London
    Dominquez (IMO): Scharfe Verurteilung jeglicher Art von Angriffen auf Schiffe
    Salvini traf sich mit dem stellvertretenden CEO des türkischen Terminalbetreibers Yilport.
    Rom
    Im Mittelpunkt des Treffens stand die Ausbaggerung des Hafens von Tarent.
    Die Logistics & Sea Academy hat sich mit neuen Simulatoren für den Betrieb von Schiffen, Schleppern, Zügen und Hafenkränen ausgestattet
    Venedig
    Investition von vier Millionen Euro
    Giovanni Punzo, Gründer und dreißigjähriger Präsident von CIS – Interporto Campano, ist gestorben.
    Nola
    Zu den Gründern von Italo, dem ersten privaten italienischen Betreiber des Hochgeschwindigkeitsnetzes
    Das neue Zweimast-RoRo-Schiff Neoliner Origin wird morgen in Livorno eintreffen.
    Vado Ligure
    Es verfügt über eine Kapazität von 1.200 Laufmetern an rollendem Material
    Die Refinanzierung der Kapitalstruktur der Setramar-Gruppe ist abgeschlossen.
    Ravenna
    Merli: ein entscheidender Schritt auf unserem Wachstumsweg
    Liguoris Amtszeit als Leiter der Hafenbehörde von Triest wurde verlängert.
    Rom
    In der Rolle des außerordentlichen Kommissars der Institution bestätigt
    Vereinbarung zur Fertigstellung der Elektrifizierungsarbeiten an den Docks im Hafen von Gioia Tauro
    Gioia Tauro
    Die Investition von 70 Millionen Euro zur Fertigstellung des Projekts wurde bestätigt.
    Eine Maersk-Delegation am Containerterminal der Grendi Group im Porto Canale in Cagliari.
    Mailand
    Im Zentrum der Debatte steht die Entwicklung des Verkehrs nach Nordafrika
    Geodis ernennt Maurizio Bortolan zum CEO für Italien
    Mailand
    Es koordiniert die drei Geschäftsbereiche Kontraktlogistik, Spedition und Straßentransport
    Hafen von Livorno: Proteste wegen Gaza dürfen den Betrieb nicht behindern.
    Livorno
    Die Mitglieder des Partnerschaftsgremiums betonten die Notwendigkeit, dass es für alle Schiffe zugänglich sein muss
    GNV, Vereinbarung mit dem sizilianischen Terminalbetreiber Portitalia ist positiv.
    Genua
    Ziel sei es ausschließlich, die Tarife vorübergehend zu ergänzen, präzisierte das Unternehmen.
    Zwei Tage Arbeit mit ESPO in Rom im Mittelmeerraum und in europäischen Häfen
    Rom
    Von Assoporti organisierte Treffen
    Im Jahr 2024 wurden in der Europäischen Union 112 Millionen gefälschte Artikel beschlagnahmt.
    Brüssel
    Rekord-Schätzwert von 3,8 Milliarden Euro
    Streiks und Proteste in Häfen, Informationsanfrage an den Garanten
    Rom
    Informationsanfrage von Präfekten, Hafenbehörden und Hafenbehörden
    Die Danaos Corporation hat bei Dalian Shanhaiguan zwei 7.165 TEU-Containerschiffe bestellt.
    Athen
    Die Auslieferung erfolgt im dritten Quartal 2027
    Im zweiten Quartal ging der Güterverkehr auf dem österreichischen Schienennetz um -1,4 % zurück.
    Wien
    Nur der Inlandsverkehr wächst
    ALS (FBH Group) hat 80 % von Trans World Shipping und Moda Express aus den USA erworben.
    Rozzano
    Die beiden Unternehmen beschäftigen 500 Mitarbeiter und sind in Italien, Frankreich, Großbritannien und den USA aktiv.
    Der Umsatz von Circle stieg im ersten Halbjahr 2025 um 62,1 %
    Mailand
    Nettogewinn von über 1,0 Mio. Euro (+1,8%)
    Eine ukrainische Delegation zu Gast bei der Hafenbehörde des nördlichen Tyrrhenischen Meeres
    Livorno
    Zusammenarbeit im Bereich Ausbildung und Arbeitssicherheit in Häfen
    Die EIB finanziert Phase A des neuen Wellenbrechers von Genua mit 300 Millionen Euro.
    Luxemburg
    Die Gesamtinvestition beträgt 937 Millionen Euro
    In diesem Sommer beförderten die Schiffe von GNV 1,7 Millionen Passagiere (+9%)
    Valencia
    In den nächsten Tagen wird das Unternehmen die "GNV Virgo" in Empfang nehmen, das erste LNG-betriebene Schiff
    Das Projekt zur Erweiterung, Sicherheitsverbesserung und außerordentlichen Instandhaltung des Hafens von Pozzallo wurde vorgestellt.
    Pozzallo
    Es sieht den Bau des Wellenbrecherarms vor
    Fincantieri liefert das neue Kreuzfahrtschiff Star Princess an Princess Cruises
    Monfalcone
    Es hat eine Bruttotonnage von 177.800 Tonnen und eine Kapazität von 4.300 Passagieren.
    Am 2. Oktober findet in Mailand ein Seminar zum neuen Interportgesetz statt.
    Mailand
    Es wird von der Handelskammer von Padua organisiert
    Filt Cgil ruft Hafenverwaltungen und Unternehmen dazu auf, sich den Aktionen gegen das palästinensische Massaker anzuschließen.
    Rom
    Diese Last – betonte die Gewerkschaft – könne nicht allein auf den Schultern der Hafenarbeiter lasten.
    Die Vereinbarung zwischen der Stiftung der italienischen Handelsmarineakademie und dem NATO-Zentrum in La Spezia wurde erneuert.
    Genua
    Die für 2023 unterzeichnete Zusammenarbeit wurde bestätigt
    Fischer & Rechsteiner und Gimax International übernehmen das Speditionsgeschäft von BCUBE.
    Genua
    Der Abschluss der Transaktion wird in den nächsten Tagen erwartet
    Fermerci skizziert dramatisches Szenario für den europäischen Schienengüterverkehr
    Rom
    Rizzi: Es besteht die reale Gefahr einer Verlagerung des Transports ausschließlich auf die Straße.
    Sogedim eröffnet eine neue Niederlassung in Modena
    Mesero
    Zunächst wird sich die Aktivität ausschließlich auf den britischen Exportverkehr konzentrieren und später auf andere europäische Märkte ausgeweitet werden.
    Eni schließt den Verkauf eines 30-prozentigen Anteils am Baleine-Projekt in der Elfenbeinküste an Vitol ab.
    San Donato Milanese
    Das Feld wurde 2021 entdeckt und die Produktion begann 2023
    Die neue PCTC Grande Svezia ist Teil der Flotte der Grimaldi Group geworden.
    Neapel
    Es hat eine maximale Kapazität von 9.000 ceu
    Der Stadtrat von Cagliari verabschiedet seine Stellungnahme zum Entwicklungsplan für die sardischen Häfen.
    Cagliari
    Einstimmig grünes Licht
    Der Eisenbahnsektor trägt 1,4 % zum BIP der Europäischen Union bei.
    Brüssel
    Studie im Auftrag des CER
    Im Hafen von Neapel hat die Küstenwache den Massengutfrachter Tanais Dream festgesetzt.
    Neapel
    Schwere Unregelmäßigkeiten an Bord festgestellt
    Vereinbarung zur Beschleunigung der Implementierung von Robotik in den Produktionsprozessen von Fincantieri
    Triest
    Es wurde mit der friaulischen Idea Prototipi unterzeichnet
    Sergio Liardo ist der neue Generalkommandeur des Port Authority Corps – Küstenwache
    Rom
    Er übernimmt das Amt von Admiral Nicola Carlone
    DBA liefert neues Terminalbetriebssystem für den georgischen Hafen Batumi
    Villorba
    Das Projekt umfasst alle Phasen der Entwicklung, Erprobung und Betriebserprobung
    Angriff auf ein Schiff im Golf von Aden
    Portsmouth
    Der Kapitän berichtete, dass er einen Aufprall im Wasser und eine Explosion gehört habe.
    Danilo Ricci wurde zum Geschäftsführer von Tarros Line ernannt.
    La Spezia
    Er hatte innerhalb der Gruppe verschiedene Positionen in Italien und im Ausland inne
    Ständiger Diskussionstisch zwischen Confindustria Nautica und Federagenti
    Genua
    Dies ist in einer heute in Genua unterzeichneten Vereinbarung vorgesehen
    Im ersten Halbjahr 2025 wuchs der Kreuzfahrtverkehr in italienischen Häfen um +6 %
    Venedig
    Die zwölfte Ausgabe des Italian Cruise Day findet am 24. Oktober in Catania statt.
    SAL Heavy Lift kauft zwei Halbtaucherschiffe von Pan Ocean
    Hamburg
    Sie wurden 2008 und 2012 gebaut
    30 % von Sangritana Cargo werden von der in den Marken ansässigen Firma Transadriatico übernommen
    Der Adler
    Der Verkauf wird in den nächsten Tagen abgeschlossen
    Die achte Ausgabe von "A Sea of Switzerland" findet am 6. Oktober in Lugano statt.
    Lugano
    Forum zur wirtschaftlichen und logistischen Integration zwischen den ligurischen Häfen, der nordwestlichen Produktionsregion und der Schweiz
    Assoporti trifft sich auf der RemTech EXPO 2025, um den grünen Wandel in italienischen Häfen zu diskutieren.
    Ferrara
    Der Smart Ports Award wurde an drei Hafensystembehörden verliehen
    DEME bestellt neues Kabelverlegungsschiff bei PaxOcean mit Sitz in Singapur
    Beveren-Kruibeke-Zwijndrecht
    Es wird in der chinesischen Werft Zhoushan gebaut
    Die erste Lieferung syrischen Öls seit 14 Jahren kommt im Hafen von Triest an.
    London
    Ein Teil der Ladung - so berichtet S&P Global Commodity Insights - wurde am sardischen Terminal von Sarroch entladen
    Im August wuchs der Güterverkehr im Hafen von Taranto um +20,3 %
    Tarent
    Auch die Fähre "Drea" wurde vom apulischen Hafen abgewiesen, wo sie jedoch vorübergehend angehalten wird
    Der Containerverkehr im Hafen von Los Angeles blieb im August stabil.
    Los Angeles
    Mengenrückgang im restlichen Jahr 2025 erwartet
    Treffen zwischen den Hafenbehörden von Jacksonville und Livorno
    Livorno
    Zu den Zielen gehört die Einrichtung eines oder mehrerer Direktverbindungen zwischen den beiden Häfen
    Die Italienische Staatsbahn und ENAC unterzeichnen eine Vereinbarung über den Einsatz von Drohnen zur Infrastrukturüberwachung.
    Rom
    Sie werden auch zum Überfliegen von Abschnitten des Schienen- und Straßennetzes eingesetzt, die sonst nur schwer zu überwachen wären.
    A.SPE.DO, der Hafen von La Spezia ist von entscheidender Bedeutung für die Sicherung von Arbeitsplätzen, Entwicklung und Zukunft der lokalen Wirtschaft.
    La Spezia
    Landolfi: Wir können es uns nicht leisten, seinen Wert zu unterschätzen.
    HÄFEN
    Italienische Häfen:
    Ancona Genua Ravenna
    Augusta Gioia Tauro Salerno
    Bari La Spezia Savona
    Brindisi Livorno Taranto
    Cagliari Neapel Trapani
    Carrara Palermo Triest
    Civitavecchia Piombino Venedig
    Italienische Logistik-zentren: Liste Häfen der Welt: Landkarte
    DATEN-BANK
    ReedereienWerften
    SpediteureSchiffs-ausrüster
    agenturenGüterkraft-verkehrs-unternehmer
    MEETINGS
    Am 2. Oktober findet in Mailand ein Seminar zum neuen Interportgesetz statt.
    Mailand
    Es wird von der Handelskammer von Padua organisiert
    Die achte Ausgabe von "A Sea of Switzerland" findet am 6. Oktober in Lugano statt.
    Lugano
    ››› Archiv
    NACHRICHTENÜBERBLICK INHALTSVERZEICHNIS
    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)
    ››› Nachrichtenüberblick Archiv
    FORUM über Shipping
    und Logistik
    Intervento del presidente Tomaso Cognolato
    Roma, 19 giugno 2025
    ››› Archiv
    Das MIT trifft sich mit den Leitern der italienischen AdSPs
    Rom
    Treffen zur strategischen Vision der Regierung für den Sektor und zur Hafenreform
    Yang Ming beauftragt Hanwha Ocean Co. mit dem Bau von sieben 15.880 TEU-Containerschiffen
    Keelung
    Sie werden zwischen 2028 und 2029 ausgeliefert
    Für die Entwicklung des ukrainischen Hafens Tschornomorsk sind über 40 Interessenbekundungen eingegangen.
    Kiew
    Heute fand die erste Sitzung der Ausschreibungskommission statt
    Das erste kommerzielle Schiff wird am öffentlichen Dock in Largo Trattaroli in Ravenna erwartet.
    Ravenna
    Der Autotransporter "AICC Huanghu" kommt bald
    Die Terminal Road Show von Assiterminal beginnt
    Genua
    Cognolato: Wir möchten unsere Verbindungen zu den lokalen Gemeinschaften und Gebieten stärken.
    Der Containerverkehr im Hafen von Long Beach ging im letzten Monat um 1,3 % zurück.
    Langer Strand
    Die Zahl der leeren Container nimmt zu, die Zahl der vollen Container nimmt ab.
    Assoporti, das Kreuzfahrtangebot der italienischen Häfen, präsentiert auf der Messe Seatrade Europe.
    Hamburg
    Giampieri: Wir sind führend im Mittelmeerraum und in Europa
    Commander Claudio Tomei, USCLAC-Präsident von 2012 bis 2024, ist verstorben.
    Viareggio
    Sein starkes Engagement für die Verbesserung der Arbeitsbedingungen italienischer Seeleute
    Im ersten Quartal 2025 wuchs der Güterverkehr in griechischen Häfen um +1,4 %
    Piräus
    Passagiere um -1,1 % gesunken
    HD Hyundai Samho bestellt vier neue Containerschiffe
    Seoul
    Auftragswert rund 468 Millionen Dollar
    Triest: Betrügerische Insolvenz im Schiffbausektor
    Triest
    Ermittlungen gegen ein in Palermo ansässiges Unternehmen
    Der Containerverkehr im Hafen von Hongkong ging im August um 7,4 % zurück.
    Hongkong
    In den ersten acht Monaten des Jahres 2025 betrug der Rückgang -3,8 %
    Der Containerverkehr im Hafen von Singapur ging im August weiter zurück
    Singapur
    Gesamtwarenmenge um +1,1 % gestiegen
    BigLift Shipping und CY Shipping bestellen zwei weitere Schwergutschiffe
    Amsterdam
    Bestellung bei der chinesischen Werft Jing Jiang Nanyang Shipbuilding Co. aufgegeben.
    Die Fähre Charthage wurde im Hafen von Genua unter Verwaltungshaft genommen
    Genua
    Eine Inspektion der Küstenwache ergab zahlreiche Mängel
    Debüt des größten Schiffs von Disney Cruise Line um drei Monate verschoben
    Lake Buena Vista
    Aufgrund von Bauverzögerungen muss die Jungfernfahrt auf den 10. März verschoben werden.
    Shell beliefert Hapag-Lloyd-Containerschiffe mit verflüssigtem Biomethan
    Hamburg
    Vereinbarung mit sofortiger Wirkung
    Andrea Zoratti wurde zum Generaldirektor von Hub Telematica ernannt
    Genua
    Das Unternehmen wird von Assagenti und Spediporto kontrolliert
    Jotun und Messina unterzeichnen eine Vereinbarung zur Verbesserung der Umwelt- und Handelsleistung von Schiffen.
    Genua
    Das Schiff "Jolly Rosa" wird die Lösung von Hull Skating Solutions nutzen
    PSA Genova Pra‘ gibt die Einstellung von 25 Mitarbeitern für den Containerumschlag bekannt.
    Genua
    Ferrari: Die internationalen Märkte haben sich grundlegend verändert
    CMA CGM erhebt keine Zuschläge für neue US-Steuern auf chinesische Schiffe und chinesische Dienstleistungen
    Marseille
    Die vom USTR im April angekündigten Sätze gelten ab dem 14. Oktober.
    Südkoreanische HJ Shipbuilding erhält Aufträge für vier 8.850 TEU-Containerschiffe
    Busan
    Aufträge im Gesamtwert von rund 461 Millionen Dollar
    - Via Raffaele Paolucci 17r/19r - 16129 Genua - ITALIEN
    tel.: +39.010.2462122, fax: +39.010.2516768, e-mail
    Umsatzsteuernummer: 03532950106
    Registrazione Stampa 33/96 Tribunale di Genova
    Verantwortlicher Direktor: Bruno Bellio
    Jede Reproduktion, ohne die ausdrückliche Erlaubnis des Herausgebers, ist verboten
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