SCDigest Editorial Staff
SCDigest Says: |
At roughly half speed, fuel consumption drops to 100-150 tons per day from 350 tons - saving as much as $5,000 an hour in operating costs.

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If you find your import shipments from Asia are taking even longer via ocean freight these days, you can blame that on the recession too.
Amidst a dramatic drop in global trade, much steeper than the drop in overall economic activity, the ocean carriers are taking a financial beating, and finding any way they can to save money – including dramatically slowing speeds, and forsaking the Suez Canal.
Global trade is expected to fall 9% in value this year, according to a recent estimate by the World Trade Organization. Container volumes in many ports are down by double-digits over the previous year. Shipping giant Maersk says its container volumes will be down more than 12% in 2009.
With a glut of capacity, rates have fallen to levels, in some cases, below variable operating costs. According to the analysts at Drewry Shipping Consultants Ltd., rates have fallen especially hard between Asia and Europe, down 69% from a year ago. As a result, shipping lines have removed hundreds of ships from service and cut back on existing shipping schedules.
But most carriers need to do much more to improve their financial situations – and, in some cases, that means lengthening the supply chain.
"We cannot go on doing business as we have done," Maersk Chief Executive Nils Andersen recently said.
The Wall Street Journal, for example, recently reported that the Eugen Maersk was recently cruising the Atlantic Ocean after a stop in Rotterdam at just 10 knots or so, well below her top speed of 26 knots.
Why? Because the fuel savings are dramatic. At roughly half speed, fuel consumption drops to 100-150 tons per day from 350 tons - saving as much as $5,000 an hour in operating costs.
(Global Supply Chain and Logistics Article - Continued Below) |