The Maritime Economist Magazine Spring 2015 | Page 30
THEMARITIME Economist
Profession & Practice
Has the shipping industry
become victim of its own
success?
Dr (Capt) Suresh Bhardwaj, fics,fni,fcmmi
Resident Director, Maritime Training and Research Foundation, Chennai
Negligible cost of freight
Undoubtedly the shipping industry contributes
immensely to the cause of globalisation as
noted in the UNCTAD Review of Maritime Transport
(2014, Figure 1.1). Shipping services being a derived
demand, its performance goes in tandem with the global
economic activity represented in terms of GDP
,
manufacturing index and merchandise trade.
However, over last few years the merchandise
trade is seen to have grown twice as fast as the
world GDP which is reportedly due to the multiplier
,
effect resulting from the globalization of production
processes, increased trade in intermediate goods
and deepening and extension of global supply chains
(UNCTAD,2014). Notably, the Review also records
that 53 % of world bulk carrier fleet (in DWT terms)
is new investment (age 0 – 4 years).The return on
investment for the shipping companies however, has
been far below the expectations. The current market
condition for Bulk carriers is deplorable as reflected in
the table below:
The yardstick for the success of shipping industry is the
declining cost of freight that renders the global supply
chains cost-efficient and contributes to the increased
globalization. Initiatives like economies of scale and
efficient port operations not-withstanding, other
measures to reduce cost of operations to bear
low freights takes its toll on safe ship operations.
Governance of the industry is then through enforcing
minimum compliances to regulatory requirements.
Regulatory requirements in turn, emanate from
accident investigations. The paper builds on this
root-cause analysis and delves deeper as it runs into
some questionable fundamentals of risk management
within the shipping industry.
ME Mag
30
SPOT TC AVG 1 (USD)
On 4th March 2015 (USD)
ONE YEAR AGO (USD)
1 Spot TC Average = The Average Value of the Main Shipping
Routes applicable for each of the 3 types of ships
Capesize Panamax
4979
4615
22295
8502
Supramax
5755
11727
Source: (http://www.dryships.com/pages/report.php)