Tag Archives: Shipping

New disruptions to supply chains in 2022

In December, Drewry published on their blog this article describing four significant disruptions likely to happen to shipping in 2022.

I feel these are right on target for the business, and will affect international shippers of all sizes, and intermediaries, such as brokers and freight forwarders.

I’m especially concerned with disruption in the resale of blocks of container space. Drewry’s discussion of MQCs (Minimum Quantity Commitments) indicates that contracts being tried out will require the MQC to be evenly spread across the year. This will be very hard for most forwarders to meet. While some of the business is of the level-quantity, just-in-time sort, lots of other shippers have seasonal blips in their demand. Those seasonal demands cannot be supported by regular fixed-quantity shipments; inventory costs would balloon, jeopardizing the business.

I’m using the word ‘seasonal’ in a time-series sense, not a climate sense; there is a lot of business that experiences ups and downs in demand, not related to weather, but to the needs of their customers. Clothing retail offers an example; summer wardrobes need to be brought in in early spring; winter clothes in late summer. Christmas tree lights and trees themselves are only needed in September-October to be ready for the Thanksgiving to Christmas buying period.

Smaller brokers and forwarders usually exist because they can provide special services to smaller shippers. They need to get access to space in order to help these shippers. Having to purchase on the spot market exclusively will mean that many small shippers will be handicapped.

But we cannot expect the brokers and forwarders to provide inventory consolidation services for the shippers who have these seasonal needs.

I recommend reading the brief article provided.

Drewry – Browse Recent Opinion Articles – New disruptions to supply chains in 2022 and how international shippers can respond

Drewry – Browse Recent Opinion Articles – New disruptions to supply chains in 2022 and how international shippers can respond

World Bank takes its anti-LNG stance to the IMO

The World Bank says it will not back using LNG for marine transport. It says that LNG is a source of methane emissions, which are currently unmeasured but which could overwhelm any advantage in CO2 reduction created by moving away from heavy fuel oil (HFO). LPG-powered ships often emit some methane as they burn the Propane gas.

Methane is well known as a bad source of pollution. One source is from cows, such as those confined to feedlots. But there are many others, including flaring gas from oil wells, fracking gas operations, and landfills. Nowadays at some landfills, methane is captured— pipes are sunk into the fill and the methane pumped to a generating station, to provide energy to operate the landfill’s equipment. It’s a good fuel when trapped, and burned into hydrogen and oxygen.

LNG is the symbol for Liquefied Natural Gas, and it consists largely of methane.

The World Bank prefers green hydrogen fuel for projects.

Not everyone agrees. some of the pushback has started already. Something like 25% of the newbuild ships today are slated to be LNG-powered. Perhaps more engineering needs to be applied to those ships, to reduce methane emissions.

Sam Chambers September 30, 2021

World Bank takes its anti-LNG stance to the IMO – Splash247

Sam Chambers October 5, 2021

LNG fuel proponents fire back at the World Bank – Splash247

Maersk predicts even better remainder of 2021

The ocean shipping line Maersk is on track to earn over $22 billion in profit (EBITDA, in financial terms; earnings before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization, if you are not familiar.) this year. Free cash flow will be over $14 billion. That is a lot of money.

Capital expense, for new ships and the like, will be around $7 billion.

This graph, from their annual report, shows Maersk’s EBITDA over the last several years.

Source: Maersk 2021 Annual Report.

Here’s Maersk’s most recent annual report in full.

18 September 2021 Jack Donnelly Shipping Lines

Maersk revises earnings forecasts, predicts even better remainder of 2021 – Port Technology International