News was prepared under the information support of Online Daily Newspaper on Hellenic and international Shipping "Hellenic Shipping News". |
28 Nov 2008
The financial crisis of the last few months and the ensuing economic downturn are putting enormous strains on the once booming ocean shipping industry. Benefiting from the past several years of expanding shipping volumes and building ever-larger ships to meet increasing demand to move containers, the shipping industry is now starting to seize up as the demand substantially weakens.
As a result, major container shippers, bulk operators and port
authorities in China are suddenly suffering badly as the slumping
export sector passes on the impact of slumping worldwide demand.
Shanghai,
one of the world's busiest ports, has cut its container traffic target
for the year by 5 percent, blaming this on the global financial crisis
and an economic slowdown.
With a container volume of 26.15 million
twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) last year on the back of over 20
percent growth, Shanghai surpassed Hong Kong for the first time in 2007
to become the world's No 2 container port, second only to Singapore.
However,
such phenomenal growth has been tempered by the ongoing global economic
recession. Total container throughput in Shanghai is expected to reach
28.5 million TEUs, less than its earlier target of 30 million TEUs. The
port attributed the slowdown to the drop in export volumes and sluggish
domestic demand, according to Chen Xiyuan, president of Shanghai
International Port Group Co (SIPG), operator of China's busiest
container port.
Chen said container exports to the US, which account
for 20 percent of the city's total export volume, have slid 7.8 percent
in the first nine months of this year.
In addition, shipping fees
have been dropping like a stone, Chen said. The shipping price from
Shanghai to Europe, for example, has fallen from $1,000 to $200 per
container since the beginning of this year.
With the Baltic Dry
Index (BDI), a measure of commodity-shipping rates, tumbling 90 percent
off its May peak, many shipping companies in China are reportedly
keeping their ships idle, because the current prices can barely cover
their costs.
The situation is just as grim at shipyards. As slowing
economic growth cuts demand for steel, coal and iron ore, demand for
ships is also falling. According to shipbrokers Clarkson, global demand
for container ships has fallen by nearly 50 percent this year.
China
is among the hardest hit countries. According to a recent report from
China International Capital Corporation Limited (CICC), Chinese
shipyards experienced a 34 percent drop in new ship orders in the first
nine months of this year, as compared to the global average of 27
percent.
This trend is expected to continue as global trade growth
is projected to continue its downward spiral. In its recent forecast,
the International Monetary Fund projected that world trade growth would
slow to 4.9 percent this year and 4.1 percent next year, due to reduced
demand for imports as a result of the overall weakness of the global
economy. The volume of trade growth could begin to contract for the
first time since 2002, industry experts said.
On the other hand,
China's domestic demand is also softening, given that the global
economic recession is extending its tentacles into many industrial
sectors, which has added to the woes of ship operators. China's steel
and real estate sectors, in particular, have registered a significant
slowdown. Major steel manufacturers in China announced 20 percent cut
in production on sluggish market demand and plunging prices.
However,
some are more optimistic regarding the industry's future prospects. Liu
Zuoliang, chairman of Shanghai Tongsheng Investment Group, said with
the completion of Yangshan Deepwater Port this December, Shanghai is
well on track to realize its ambition of becoming an international
shipping hub. The deepwater port is believed crucial for expanding the
city's container handling capacity.
Third-phase expansion of the
deepwater port is expected to wrap up and it will open to ships and
traffic by mid-December, bringing the port's annual handling capacity
to 12 to 15 million TEUs with 16 berths in all, project developers said.
Meanwhile,
construction of the port's western section will start next year and is
slated for completion with 10 to 12 berths by 2013.
While Yangshan
Port has also experienced some slowdown, from the projected 9 million
to a little over 8 million TEUs in throughput this year, Liu still
expected the port to be highly competitive given its
international-standard hardware and services. The outlook remains
upbeat because Yangshan Port has been operating well above its designed
capacity, Liu said.
"It is recognized internationally that ports
operating at 70 percent of their designed capacity are comparatively
healthier, so even with the slowdown setting in, we believe the
container volume at Yangshan Port can be maintained at a proper level."
Source: China Daily