What's happening in Europe

 

Europe Trade Specialists 

 

Globelink Int'l Freight
Forwarding (HK) Ltd.

In Unity, We Link The Globe!
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Greencarrier Asia Ltd.

Yes, it's possible!
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Tianjin Shengyuanyujia
International Forwarding
Co., Ltd.

SYYJ will bring you different service,
differenent surprise, and make you
big achievement. We are longing for
work together with you for a better
tomorrow.
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Sea-Air Logistics (HK) Ltd.

Committed to the highest in industry
standards to meet your needs
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CASA China Limited Shenzhen

Call Anytime, Service Anywhere.
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AEL-Berkman Forwarding
(HK) Ltd.

Global Logistics, Personal Support
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Lucky Freight (HK) Ltd.

Devotion Creates Professionalization
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Odyssey International (HK) Ltd. 

We can provide excellent services
in order to meet customers'
satisfaction.
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MBS Logistics (Shanghai)
Limited

Your World's Local Forwarder
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Qingdao Wintrust logistics
Co., Ltd

Eager to progress - we serve
costumers honestly and approved
by vast majority of customers
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Worldex Logistics Qingdao
Co., Ltd.

Logistics Service Provider
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Panda Logistics Co., Ltd.
Qingdao Branch

Ever-lasting operation & profit
sharing
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Eternal Fortune Freight
Forwarding Co Ltd.

We are the professional LCL logistics
supplier in Tianjin.
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Little capacity growth is revealed in P3 alliance proposed schedules  More....

East-West cascading sparks North-South rate war as capacity proves hard
  to soak up
More....

North Europe's peak season still disappointing   More....

 

East trumps west in Mediterranean with eastern European cargo
diverting to Med ports

 


DESPITE more mega ships in the world fleet, vessel capacity cascading into the Asia-Mediterranean tradelane between has been minimal, according to London's Drewry Maritime Research.

But carriers need to cancel sailings from Asia to stabilise westbound rates as there is little sign of economic recovery in the western Med to do the job, say Drewry analysts.

The withdrawal of the ABX Black Sea service alone - a reduction of vessel capacity of seven per cent on the tradelane - will still not be enough to keep utilisation above 90 per cent during the winter, they said.

Eight sailings were cancelled during the month, including four from the G6's ABX service to the Black Sea and four from CSCL, "K" Line, Yang Ming, PIL, Wan Hai, Cosco, Zim and Hanjin.

Yet cargo growth from Asia to the Mediterranean remained high in August with shipments out of Asia reaching 412,000 TEU, compared to 420,000 TEU in July, and 415,000 TEU in May and June, attributed to shippers trying to beat China's new value added tax on shipping from August.

August volume increased throughput seven per cent year on year with growth to the eastern Med rising 11.2 per cent to 1.6 million TEU while the western Med only had 3.1 per cent, uptick to 1.5 million TEU. Still, both were better than the one per cent growth on Asia-north Europe trade at the same time.

This surprised Drewry analysts who noted that the positive Med numbers came against a background of severe economic depression still clouding Spain, Greece, Italy and Cyprus.

This was later attributed to a greater cargo flow shipped from central Europe via the Adriatic, which they found difficult to quantify, while noting with interest that the P3 mega alliance has announced improved direct services from Asia to the Adriatic.

Giving credence to the wisdom of such a decision, Drewry noted that Trieste's January-September container traffic increased 14 per cent to 349,000 TEU, although Koper's only rose by four per cent, to 445,500 TEU.

Containerised exports from Eastern European show that Turkey leads the pack, but carriers have been cautious in response with vessel capacity increasing only one per cent between July and August to 453,000 TEU.

Vessel capacity was then reduced by seven per cent in September mostly because of the G6 ABX service cancellations as well as seven other sailings. Other changes were confined to seasonal schedule changes to port pairs and vessel upgrades with the average capacity of all vessels deployed, increasing minimally from 9,052 TEU in July to 9,076 TEU in August and then onto 9,193 TEU in September.

The consequence is that average vessel utilisation remained above 90 per cent in August, which helped keep rates up, but then the spot market sagged shortly afterwards.

On the eastbound leg, cargo volumes from the Mediterranean to Asia in August were high, said Drewry, reaching 176,000 TEU compared to 188,000 TEU in July and 179,000 TEU in June. This took the year-to-date increase up to an impressive 11.7 per cent, albeit from a small base. Growth from the eastern Med was 15 per cent, compared to eight per cent from the western Med.

Eastern European container cargo has also been rising, particularly from Slovenia, thought to be the diversion to central European exports from north Europe ports.

This is also thought to be the result of westbound schedule changes that caused eastbound vessel capacity to rise one per cent between July and August to 338,000 TEU, and then to fall seven per cent in September, followed by another one per cent drop in October.

But it also meant that vessel utilisation fell from 56 per cent in July to 52 per cent in August, an advantage not long lost to shippers and quickly reflected in spot market rates.

This was followed a 20 per cent drop in eastbound carrier capacity and 8.5 per cent westbound for unusable slots due to deadweight limitations and the high-cube factor, plus a 2.5 per cent cut for outsized cargo and two per cent westbound.

 

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