What's happening in Europe

 

Europe Trade Specialists 

 

Bright Express International
Co., Ltd.

The Durable And Reliable Future
Star
More....

 

Globelink Int'l Freight
Forwarding (HK) Ltd.

In Unity, We Link The Globe!
More....

 

Greencarrier Asia Ltd.

Yes, it's possible!
More....

 

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.
More....

 

Sea-Air Logistics (HK) Ltd.

Committed to the highest in industry
standards to meet your needs
More....


CASA China Limited Shenzhen

Call Anytime, Service Anywhere.
More....

 

AEL-Berkman Forwarding
(HK) Ltd.

Global Logistics, Personal Support
More....

 

Lucky Freight (HK) Ltd.

Devotion Creates Professionalization
More....

 

Odyssey International (HK) Ltd. 

We can provide excellent services
in order to meet customers'
satisfaction.
More....

 

MBS Logistics (Shanghai)
Limited

Your World's Local Forwarder
More...
.
 

Qingdao Wintrust logistics
Co., Ltd

Eager to progress - we serve
costumers honestly and approved
by vast majority of customers
More....

 

Worldex Logistics Qingdao
Co., Ltd.

Logistics Service Provider
More....

 

Panda Logistics Co., Ltd.
Qingdao Branch

Ever-lasting operation & profit
sharing
More....

 

Eternal Fortune Freight
Forwarding Co Ltd.

We are the professional LCL logistics
supplier in Tianjin.
More....

 


Megaship paradox resolved by re-thinking the situation as Malcom McLean
  might have done
  
More....

Sino-Euro rail may not cost out today, but contains a tale of two differing
  transport policies
  
More....

Humanitarian challenge must be overcome before momentous opportunity
  can be exploited   
More....

 

Will the assault on Northern Range Ports from the south be
stymied by low oil?

 


DETERMINING the true nature of the oil price plunge - is it chronic or a hiccough? - has made it hard to determine trends in the Asia-Europe trade.

One big surprise came in January with the failure of UN's emission control areas (ECAs) crisis to have an impact. It was widely expected to increase bunker costs 50 per cent in the English Channel, the North and Baltic Seas as well as the entire North American coast except for Mexico.

Which it did - but with crude falling 54 per cent, it hardly mattered. While there has been rebound since, many feel "black gold" has lost its lustre now that so many countries sprout oil these days.

While many fears were eliminated, so too were countervailing strategies to be deployed after the low-sulphur fuel crisis hit.

Some countervailing schemes were delightfully sneaky, like the Port of Gothenburg's plan to capture most of Sweden's forest product trade by taking advantage of the harbour's comparatively low exposure to ECA routes before ships reached the freedom of the high seas.

The Gothenburg scheme would take advantage of the supposedly severe impact the low-sulphur fuel mandate would have on the Baltic, obliterating a thriving short sea trade to its northernmost ports. Because ships going north went deadhead, and only returned with payload, it could not long survive with the new fuel rules. Or so it seemed before low oil intruded.

Doing the math with historic prices, Gothenburg prepared itself for what was considered an inevitability, and built new cargo consolidation docks and new freight handling facilities and relied on under-used rail and road capacity to deliver the goods cross country for worldwide export. But low-oil ended that, for the moment at least.

Then there is the US$12 billion Helsinki-Tallinn tunnel project whose utility is doubtful if oil prices remain low. A feasibility study for a 105-kilometre tunnel between Helsinki and the Estonian capital of Tallinn has just been done. It would avoid the same costly sea route to get its northern lumber resources south by road and rail, bypassing Russian territory by going under the Gulf of Finland. Strategic reasons, given diplomatic difficulties with Russia, still stand, but crucial economic imperatives have disappeared in the wake of low-oil.

But European northern activities are dwarfed by initiatives from the Mediterranean to the Black Sea, where warlike Islamicists and Russians make the application of rules for things as arcane as carbon footprints problematic.

It is here, in the Med Free Zone, where there is no ECA, that more wide-ranging initiatives are taking place, but again - because of the fall in oil prices - each one has been stripped of its urgency.

What these ports on the north side of the Med and Black Sea have come to represent is an attack on the dominance of the Northern Range ports - Le Havre, Rotterdam, Antwerp and Hamburg, as well as lesser ports of Zeebrugge, Bremerhaven and Gdynia.

Anyone looking at a map of Europe can be forgiven for assuming that ships going through the Suez Canal would naturally discharge their Asian cargoes at any number Mediterranean or Black Sea ports to access the north continent. It is unquestionably the shortest of routes as the crow flies.

It is certainly counterintuitive to think that these ships would pass these Med ports, sail by Gibraltar into the Atlantic, go around the Iberian Peninsula, across the stormy Bay of Biscay and to discharge cargo at Northern Range ports of Le Havre, Rotterdam and Hamburg. But that's what happens.

Of course, it isn't as silly as it seems - or wasn't until various shipping developments tended to undermine logic that underpins the Northern Range doctrine. But again that potential reversal has itself been threatened with reverse in recent months by low oil.

With the Russian ethnic insurgency, the growth of Odessa has been stunted, but as late as last August, a 9,400-TEU ships called at the port. With any luck, the argument is likely to be resolved in time.

Once resolved, the northern Black Sea ports can resume their albeit more limited role in supplying Asia goods northward rather than being recipients of overland imports from the west and north.  

 

 Page  1  2   3   [Next]

* - Indicate required field(s).

Do you think the dominance of the Northern Range ports can be
challenged by an assault from the south?
Send us your thoughts.
 

* Message:


* Email :