Tag Archives: ocean shipping

Mauritius and the Wakashio Oil Spill: A Safety Culture Failure

The island country of Mauritius was the scene of a ship breakup after grounding. The picture is below, from the article. The flag state was Panama, which conducted its own investigation. The crew was overdue for leave and waiting for a convenient port.

Wakashio broke apart causing a large oil spill resulting in a $2.5 billion cost the report find (IMO)

Wakashio broke apart causing a large oil spill resulting in a $2.5 billion cost the report find (IMO)

There were other technical problems as the ship approached the shore. But the master had 4 drinks and could not take command of the ship. There was no qualified lookout. Hands were at a party onboard.

But the court also found that the local Mauritius authorities were in complete confusion; they could have pulled the ship off the reef in the first couple of days, but did not, allowing the ship to destroy 96km of coral reef.

Maritime accidents are increasingly common. Many are due to issues with the captain and crew. The maritime industry and flag states have a lot to do to reduce the frequency of accidents. The culture of safety is often not present on ships; that is the fault of the master and the ship operator.

Read the article for details.

Published Oct 3, 2025 7:47 PM by The Maritime Executive

https://maritime-executive.com/article/mauritius-cites-lack-of-safety-culture-and-local-failure-in-wakashio-report

Beijing sets port fees and restrictive policies

Retribution for the US port fees for Chinese-owned and Chinese-built ships is already here, even before the fees come into effect. The main effect seems to be a restructuring of shipping services, rather than any actual fees being collected. Operators of liner routes are simply taking the Chinese-related ships off their US runs. Several liner carriers have announced that they propose no surcharges.

I think the most important effect of the Chinese declaration is going to be the loss of data and information about Chinese ports. Most large carriers call at Chinese ports on their loops. No data means a loss of accuracy on arrival times and dwell times at the ports. This will affect all shippers and supply chain partners, making predictions more difficult.

I’m afraid geopolitics will make ocean shipping, and perhaps all kinds of carriage, into a game in which advance knowledge is impossible. We already see some effects in the loss of information from AIS due to spoofing and turning off transmission because of sanctions.


Stuart Chirls
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

https://www.freightwaves.com/news/china-could-bar-u-s-service-ships-in-new-maritime-dispute-volley

China prepares retaliation playbook

China is taking preemptive action against the US’s plans to hike port fees for China-linked tonnage.  The port fees are scheduled to come into effect on October 14, but there haven’t been any administrative rules set yet.

So we don’t know how, or if, they will be collected.

Quite a few experts believe that there won’t ever be any. The box-booking platform Freightos is one source mentioned in the article. Trump has a history of putting penalties out there and giving way in negotiations just before they will go into effect. It’s known as the Trump Always Chickens Out (TACO) effect.

I agree that we may never see any container ship fees. But I am also wary of what Trump may be giving away in the negotiations with China.

And I think history tells us that we will see severe blowback in terms of various trade restraints placed by foreign nations. These will hurt American businesses.

 Sam Chambers September 30, 2025

https://splash247.com/china-prepares-retaliation-playbook-ahead-of-us-port-fee-deadline/