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  • 22 Oct 2014 9:04 AM | Anonymous

    Original news was published on 20 October, 2014

    LONDON classification society Lloyd's Register says 24,000 TEUer will soon be plying the world's oceans,reports Copenhagen-based ShippingWatch.

    "Twelve years ago researchers were looking at Malaccamaxes, 18,000 TEU vessels named after the Malacca Strait," said Lloyd's Register container segment manager David Tozer.
    "People thought that this was absolutely crazy. But things have developed since to the extent that we'll soon see ships of 24,000 TEU. The volumes are there, so it's going to happen," said Mr Tozer. Today, the biggest are China Shipping's (CSCL) new 19,100 TEUers, which will take the crown from Maersk's 18,000 TEU Triple-E series.

    "Our customers need to understand what the future is going to look like, and they need to take control and become part of it," he said, reported Vancouver's Ship&Bunker.
    Mr Tozer said that with companies such as Maersk Line, CSCL, Evergreen and CMA CGM having already invested in 17,000 to 19,000-TEU ships, 24,000 TEU was only a matter of time as the commercial pressure to put more cargo on ships rises.

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 21 Oct 2014 10:36 AM | Anonymous

    Original news was published on 20 October, 2014

    Steel and project cargo volume increases signal improving regional economy

    At last, cargo volumes at the Great Lakes ports have rebounded to levels not seen since 2006.

    Increases in tonnage were reported by all ports and that is expected to continue through December, according to the Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation.
    The amount of international freight coming through the Port of Cleveland is up close to 20 percent over last year. Even smaller ports undefined like those in Oswego, New York, and Erie, Pennsylvania, are up this year, Laura Blades, spokeswoman for the Great Lakes Port Association, said in a statement. Rising steel imports signal increased manufacturing in the U.S. And the export of heavy machinery indicates construction is on the rise in other parts of the world.  The Port of Cleveland has been handling an unusually large amount of project cargo, much of which has been shipped to Europe, Russia and Saudi Arabia, David Gutheil, vice president of maritime and logistics at the port, told The Plain Dealer.

    “The cargo moving through the U.S. ports serves as a positive indicator that the regional economy is healthy due in part to the maritime industry,” the SLSDC  said in a statement. “The numbers speak for themselves.”

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 20 Oct 2014 12:23 PM | Anonymous

    Original news was publsihed on 19 October, 2014

    At the half way stage of the current fiscal year that began in April, the 12 ports owned by the Indian government loaded 288.48 million tonnes (mt) of various cargo, 4.2% more than the 276.85 mt handled during the same period last year. For the whole of last year (2013-14), the cumulative volume growth at the dozen portsundefinedwhich has a market share of 57%undefinedwas a paltry 1.78% at 555.49 mt. These ports are located at Kolkata, Vizag, Paradip, Chennai, Tuticorin, Ennore, Cochin, New Mangalore, Mumbai, Navi Mumbai, Mormugao and Kandla. Private ports (essentially those owned by the state governments but given to private firms for development and operation) account for the balance 43% share of India’s sea-borne cargo with a volume of 420.24 mt. A look at the data compiled by the Indian Ports Association (IPA), a body representing the 12 ports, gives an indication that India’s in-bound and out-bound cargo shipped through these ports is improving, compared with the sluggishness seen in the last three-four years, chiefly a fallout of the global meltdown of 2008.

    Driving this volume growth is India’s voracious appetite for thermal coal that is used to fire power stations. Between April and September, thermal coal loadings at the 12 ports jumped 8.54% to 39.59 mt from 36.48 mt a year earlier. Last year, the 12 ports loaded a combined 71.60 mt of thermal coal, 22% more than the 58.65 mt handled in the previous year. Coal imports have been increasing sharply year-on-year because of a severe shortage of coal in India despite significant coal reserves.

    The Narendra Modi-led government, which assumed power in May, is looking to raise power production to light up every home in India, where an estimated 400 million of the 1.2 billion people live without electricity. Thermal coal imports is poised to soar further after India’s Supreme Court last month ordered wholesale cancellation of 214 coal blocks awarded to private firms. The ports located at Paradip. Vizag, Ennore, Tuticorin, New Mangalore and Mormugao are ramping up their coal loading capacities to cater to the rising demand for imports. Container volumes handled by the 12 ports clocked a growth of 6.46% at 4 million twenty-foot equivalent units, or TEUs (the standard size of a container and a common measure of capacity in the container business), from 3.76 million TEUs a year ago. In the year to March 2014, the container volumes loaded at the 12 ports shrank 3.1% to 7.46 million TEUs from 7.70 million TEUs a year earlier. Volume growth in imported raw fertilizers is another redeeming feature of the recovery in cargo volumes at these ports. Raw fertilizer loadings jumped 25.72% to 4.39 mt from 3.49 mt a year earlier. Petroleum, oil and lubricants (POL) cargoundefinedthe largest category of cargo handled by the 12 portsundefinedremained flat at 94.24 mt in the April-September period from the 94.50 mt handled a year earlier.

    POL loadings touched 187.31 mt in the year to March 2014. Iron-ore shipments through these ports remained depressed as a court-imposed ban on production and exports in Karnataka and Goa sliced exports by about 90% over the past three years. During April-September, the 12 ports handled a combined 9.14 mt of the steel-making commodity, down from 11.84 mt a year earlier. Once a hot commodityundefinediron-ore loadings at the 12 ports touched a peak of 100.33 mt in 2009-10undefinedit has now become insignificant, unless India’s apex court alters the course on production and exports. Given the growth trajectory, Kandla port located in Gujarat could well become only the second Indian port and the first among the 12 to reach the 100 mt cargo handling mark by the end of the current fiscal. Mundra port run by the Adani Group crossed this mark last year.

    While the private ports such as the ones located in Mundra, Pipavav, Gangavaram and Krishnapatnam have benefited from the capacity constraints at the 12 ports and the delay in expanding capacities to wean away cargo, the former also have the added advantage of market-driven pricing and less interference from the bureaucracy. The 12 ports would be able to perform better if these attributes are granted to them.


    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 18 Oct 2014 12:34 PM | Anonymous

    Original news was published on 17 October, 2014

    IAG Cargo announced that it has increased the frequency of its cargo services between its Madrid hub and Santiago in Chile, facilitated by an increase in Iberia passenger flights on this route from one flight daily to ten weekly. Operating until March, the additional flights take off on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays and are serviced by Airbus A340s. Businesses using this route will benefit from a boost in freight capacity of up to 111.6 tonnes each week.

    The additional flights will operate during a season of peak supply and demand: the Chilean summer, when fruit and other perishables come into season and New Year celebrations and other festivities take place globally. IAG Cargo’s additional flights will benefit Chilean businesses by providing them with more shipping options for the duration of this busy period. Businesses exporting to the Chilean market will similarly benefit from the additional lift and flight frequency.

    Rodrigo Casal, Vice President Commercial LATAM at IAG Cargo, commented: “Chile is a hugely important country both as a market and as an exporter. We hope to help ensure that the peak season is as profitable as possible for Chilean businesses while also providing a welcome lift in services for customers shipping to the region. We are able to do this due to our product depth, service excellence and the breadth of our global network, which is one of the most important in the world when it comes to connecting to Latin America.”

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 17 Oct 2014 12:02 PM | Anonymous
    Original news was published on 15 October, 2014

    The American Institute for International Steel will sign a joint cooperation agreement with the Panama Canal Authority by the end of the year, and likely before the end of November. “Our agreement is related to promoting steel-related trade that flows through the Panama Canal to the United States and to different markets,” Richard Chriss, AIIS executive director, told American Metal Market. That trade includes both U.S. steel imports and exports, he said. The Port of Houston Authority has a similar agreement in place with the Panama Canal Authority that includes joint marketing and data sharing.

    The benefits of the agreement will extend to all AIIS member ports, including Houston, the Georgia Ports Authority and the Port of Mobile in Alabama, and boost U.S. imports and exports of finished steel and scrap.
    The Panama Canal is currently being expanded by the construction of a third set of locks, which is scheduled to open in early 2016 and designed to accommodate larger vessels. Steel shipments have played a significant role in the construction of the third set of locks. In September, ArcelorMittal shipped more than 192,000 tons of rebar for the project. In total, more than 242,000 tonnes of steel from the steelmaker’s Las Truchas plant in Mexico has been provided for the expansion.

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 15 Oct 2014 9:51 AM | Anonymous

    Original news was published on 13 October, 2014

    Five trucks removed from storage to work in copper mine

    Van der Vlist completed the shipment of five Hitachi dump trucks, from its port in Moerdijk, to the Katanga in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    The machines were shipped in from Canada in 2012, when the wheels were dismantled to move them across to the Moerdijk site for storage. Each dump truck measured 9.45-meters long, 4.98-meters wide and 4.62 meters high. The dumpers were stored in the AEO accredited storage facility for two years.

    Once the request to move them was made, Van der Vlist’s Technical Services team set about ensuring that the machines were in perfect condition before leaving storage, which meant charging batteries, checking and refilling oils and coolant, along with installing a lubrication system, Van der Vlist said in a statement.

    The trucks were driven the short distance to the ro-ro berth at Moerdijk and loaded onto the pontoon Jacob-Evert for the trip to Antwerp. The cargo was then loaded on a vessel and sailed for the DRC. Once it reached its African destination, the dump trucks were moved into Katanga where they will be used in a copper mine.

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 14 Oct 2014 11:02 AM | Anonymous

    Original news was published on 13 October, 2014

    Nicaragua will this week present plans for its interoceanic canal to leaders from more than 15 Latin American countries. The presentation will take place during a plenary session of the Permanent Conference of Political Parties of Latin America and the Caribbean (COPPPAL), which opens today.

    Nicaragua will provide documents to regional politicians to give them more information on the social and economic impact of this mega-project, estimated to cost at least US$40 billion, Prensa Latina said in a report. The Nicaragua Canal will run 278 kilometers from coast to coast and is being developed by a Hong Kong group, HKND.

    In addition to the waterway, there will be also works on other projects as an airport, several roads, a free trade zone, resorts and two ports, one on the Pacific and one in the Atlantic.

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 11 Oct 2014 11:08 AM | Anonymous
    Original news was published on 8 October, 2014

    US$2.2 billion project to carry hydroelectric power across the border

    The U.S. Department of Energy has issued a Presidential Permit to Transmission Developers for its US$2.2 billion electric transmission line to carry lower-cost Canadian hydroelectric power to New York City.

    The 333-mile  Champlain Hudson Power Express line will run under the length of Lake Champlain, through parts of the Hudson, Harlem and East rivers and beneath railroad rights of way from Quebec to Queens. The High Voltage direct current (HVdc) cable will be placed in waterways or buried along railway routes to minimize impacts to local communities and the environment, the Albany, NY-based developer said in a statement.

    Transmission Developers submitted its application for the DOE permit in July 2010. Construction is expected to take about four years.

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 10 Oct 2014 8:41 AM | Anonymous

    Original news was published on 8 October, 2014

    Fluor was awarded an engineering, procurement and construction contract by utility American Electric Power to provide environmental retrofit services at the utility company’s coal-fired Northeastern power station in Oologah, Oklahoma.

    The work is part of AEP’s plan to exit the coal-fired power plant business, which was approved by the EPA earlier this year. Unit 4 at Northeastern will be shutdown by 2016, followed by the retrofitted Unit 3 in 2026.

    Fluor will add activated carbon and dry sorbent injection systems for Unit 3 at the plant to control emissions of mercury, sulfur dioxide and acid gasses, the Texas-based engineering and construction company said in a statement. Fluor will also install a new pulse jet fabric filter to remove particulates from the emissions of Unit 3.

    Fluor will be responsible for the demolition, installation and erection of the above-ground mechanical and structural systems and components, along with related engineering and procurement services.

    *NEWS SOURCE

  • 09 Oct 2014 8:51 AM | Anonymous
    Original news was published on 8 October, 2014

    TAIWAN's Evergreen is to take slots from China United Lines (CUL) to add a direct link between Singapore, Haiphong and Ho Chi Minh City.

    China United Lines itself takes slots on the Singapore-Vietnam string of the Straits-Vietnam-Malaysia (SE2/SVS) weekly service of Yang Ming and OEL, reports Alphaliner.

    This operation calls at Singapore, Port Kelang, Singapore, Haiphong, Ho Chi Minh City, Singapore, but CUL and Evergreen are not involved on the Port Kelang segment.

    The service uses two ships, the 1,803-TEU YM Inventive and the 1,500-TEU YM Heights, both of which are operated by Yang Ming. The loop turns in two weeks.

    Evergreen will brand this new service 'South East Asia II' (SEA 2).

    The SEA 2 will kick off with the sailing of the YM Inventive from Haiphong on October 16.

    *NEWS SOURCE

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