COPENHAGEN: A tumultuous year in the container-shipping industry, which included one big operator going under and others bundling together to stay afloat, ended with three major alliances poised to dominate ocean trade for years to come.
Container shipping, which moves 95 per cent of all manufactured goods, is estimated by industry executives to be worth $US1 trillion ($1.39 trillion) a year. Traditionally controlled by sovereign-wealth funds and deep-pocketed individuals, it has been a fragmented industry over the past 30 years, with dozens of operators regularly undercutting each other on price.
But overcapacity and sluggish global trade have forced the biggest players to merge or form alliances, allowing them to cut operating costs by hundreds of millions of dollars by sharing ships and port calls. The three major groupings, called 2M, Ocean Alliance and THE Alliance, have cleared most regulatory hurdles over the past two years.
2M, consisting of Denmark’s Maersk Line and Geneva-based Mediterranean Shipping the world’s two biggest operators in terms of capacity is already under way, while the other two alliances expect to begin operations in April. One company left out, South Korea’s Hanjin Shipping, is shedding ships after seeking bankruptcy protection in August.
According to marine data providers, the three alliances, which comprise 11 shipping operators, will handle much of the container trade on the Asia-to-Europe and trans-Pacific routes.
“The few players left outside will either try to join in, shrink to become regional operators or go belly up,” said Lars Jensen, chief executive of Copenhagen-based SeaIntelligence Consulting, adding that the world’s 20 biggest shipping companies were all expected to post a loss for 2016.
The concentration of power has raised concerns among regulators and cargo owners about price fixing and reduced services, though the Federal Maritime Commission in November said it saw no evidence of price collusion among the alliances.
“We have a monitoring process in place, and if there is an unreasonable increase in prices or a decrease in services, it could lead to an injunction to break up an alliance or lead to other necessary action,” said William Doyle, a commissioner at the US maritime watchdog.
Nevertheless, the consolidation in the industry is limiting choices for shippers, said Peter Friedmann, executive director of the Agriculture Transportation Coalition, a trade body of 2500 US agriculture and forest-product exporters. “With the remaining ocean carriers now consolidating into just three alliances using megaships, while total capacity may remain the same, we are concerned by a reduction in the frequency of sailings,” he said.
Maersk Line spokesman Michael Storgaard said with time the new industry configuration will allow for ample port calls and better reliability, with cost savings trickling down to customers. But he acknowledged that the shaping up of the alliances would be disruptive. Mr Storgaard predicted “frequent changes to services and offered capacity and fluctuating reliability”.
Cargo owners say they are seeing up to 20 per cent fewer container ship sailings across main trade routes and a 10 per cent drop in port calls since the introduction of bigger vessels, known as Triple Es, favoured by the alliances.
A Triple E, which when turned upright matches the height of the Empire State Building, can move more than 18,000 containers. Its deployment is gradually replacing smaller vessels.
As the alliances take hold, the shift to bigger vessels is contributing to congestion and delays at ports whose infrastructure is geared towards smaller ships. Triple Es also require larger cranes to unload their cargo as well as more trucks waiting at the terminals to move products inland.