All posts tagged marinetime


The Suez Canal Earns $280Million More…

Egypt’s Suez Canal Authority has reported a 20% increase in US Dollar revenues in the first quarter of 2022, compared with the corresponding period in 2021.

“The channel’s revenues recorded $1.69Billion , compared with $ 1.409Billion during the same period of the same period a year ago”, according to  Osama Rabee, Chairman of the board of the  Suez Channel Authority.

“Naval reports saw a significant increase in the passage rates of different ship types compared to last year’s period, where the numbers of cast ships rose 29.1%”, Mr. Rabee reports. “Channel transcontainer ships increased by 17%, with an increase of 27.2% in car racks ships; Tourist ships doubled in number; public goods ships recorded an increase of 18.1% and transporters increased by 6.5%”.

Observing that the Canal has not been negatively affected by the Russian /Ukrainian crisis, Rabee said 5,303 ships crossed over versus 4,581 ships the same period last year, with a difference of 722 ships, an increase of 15.8%, and the trans-channel cargo increased by 7.4% with net cargo recorded during the first quarter of the current year being 313.3Million Tonnes, compared with 291.7Million Tonnes.

The rise of the number of ships crossing the channel over the period “clearly reflected the recovery seen in the maritime transport market, and the significant growth in the global trade movement”, Rabee notes, adding that the authority is prepared to deal with the various challenges facing the maritime transport market by adopting a package of flexible marketing policies that can keep up with market variables and consider customer interests”.

 

 


Shipping and Logistics Opportunities in Africa’s Oil and Gas Industries

By NJ Ayuk, President, African Energy Chamber

One particular area where African companies can stand out is in shipping and logistics.

On the one hand, the demand for these services is both tremendous and inescapable. Shipping and logistics operators serve as crucial links in the oil and gas supply chain, in that they are responsible for moving goods, parts, equipment, and workers from the places where they can be picked up to the places where they are needed.

Some of these operators have found that oil and gas development can serve as the foundation of a successful business. Universal Africa Lines Alliance (UAL Alliance), for example, began delivering cargo to West Africa in 1973 and has now established itself as a stable provider of professional cargo handling services, focusing on break-bulk and project cargoes for the oil and gas industry. UAL Alliance moves cargo between the U.S. Gulf of Mexico and Europe to West Africa and vice versa and also offers intra-African service on the west coast of Africa.

UAL Alliance is an international firm, but it is also firmly rooted in Africa, as it serves ports in Ghana, Nigeria, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, and Angola. What’s more, it has also constructed the K5 Freeport & Oil Centre, its own logistics and supply base at the port of Malabo in Equatorial Guinea — and in doing so, it has helped to create additional jobs for the contractors and subcontractors that helped build the base, as well as the companies that now use the base. It has also helped sustain the African companies that have acted as its shipping agents, such as Akon-Donluis in Equatorial Guinea, Action Rapide Transit (ART) in Gabon, and Logistics Support Services (Pty) Ltd in Namibia.

Oil and gas exploration and development off the west coast of Africa has already kept UAL Alliance busy for nearly 40 years, and the company is looking to grow over the next few years. It has said it hopes eventually to set up shop in East Africa — presumably, so that it can start offering the same kind of services and support to emerging hydrocarbon producers such as Mozambique, Tanzania, and Uganda.

As it does, it will not only be exploring new opportunities in the region. It will also be creating new opportunities — new opportunities for local shipping agents, new opportunities for the local service providers that will build, repair, and maintain its delivery facilities and offices, and so on.

And UAL Alliance is far from the only indigenous shipping and logistics firm in Africa seeing success in the oil and gas sector. Many others were heavily represented at African Energy Week in Cape Town and some signed deals with international oil companies. A few additional examples include Nairobi-based OML Africa Logistics and Luba Freeport, which provides oilfield equipment handling and transportation in Eastern Africa; Seabird Ghana, maritime logistics and oil and gas services provider for west Africa; and Petromarine Nigeria Limited, a marine logistics services provider for Nigeria’s oil and gas industry.

Building the Right Foundation

We’re also seeing African states take proactive steps to support successful oil and gas maritime logistics operations. Look at Senegal, which is constructing a high-tech, operationally efficient “superport” near Ndayane, 50 kilometers southeast of Dakar.

The project, dubbed the “Port of the Future,” is part of the country’s energy sector expansion, launched after the discovery of approximately 450Billion cubic meters of natural gas. What’s more, Senegal is taking steps to make sure that everyday people benefit from its growing maritime infrastructure by building local capacity. Macky Sall’s Plan Senegal Emergent is specifically designed to, among other things, create opportunities for local service companies. Senegal also is fostering capacity building in maritime logistics through its National Petroleum Institute and the Dakar Business School. Aguibou Ba is the Executive Director of the Institut National du Pétrole et du Gaz (INPG), has also implemented related programmes to fast track capacity in this area through the state institute.

Another positive example is Mozambique, which is developing a national strategy for a blue economy that addresses, in addition to fishing and aquaculture, the country’s extractives and hydrocarbon sectors. The plan will also include a regional plan for maritime security. With a plan in place, hopefully followed by policies that support local entrepreneurs and capacity building, Mozambique OSPs will be in a strong position for success in maritime logistics.

The African Energy Chamber believes there are numerous opportunities available for African companies and entrepreneurs who are ready to explore the shipping and logistics sector. Now is the time to seize them.


Suez Canal: Ever Given Still Hasn’t Given Way

By Mohammed Jetutu

The MV Ever Given, the giant vessel which blocked the Suez Canal for close to a week in March 2021, still hasn’t moved away from the region.

Its seizure, by the Suez Canal Authority (SCA), is the subject of an appeal to be heard in the Ismailia court (one of the Egypt’s seven courts of appeal), in the first week of May 2021.

Ever Given’s Japanese owner, Shoei Kisen Kaisha, is appealing for the overturn of a lower court’s decision, which earlier in April 2021, gave the SCA the permission to arrest the ship. The SCA is demanding $916Million in compensation for the six-day blockage, a sum that Shoei Kisen’s insurer, the UK Club, has dismissed as extraordinarily large.

Ever Given forced a standstill of shipping activity when, on March 23, 2021, it got wedged sideways across the canal, a critical global trade artery that connects the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. The initial reason proffered for the accident was that high winds and a dust storm made the crew lose control of the ship. The 400 metrelong, 59 metre wide, 224,000 tonne ship is one of the largest cargo vessels in the world.  Pictured on its side, the ship presented a rough sketch of a skyscraper.

“The appeal against the arrest was made on several grounds, including the validity of the arrest obtained in respect of the cargo and the lack of supporting evidence for the SCA’s very significant claim,” the UK Club complained.  SCA’s $916Million demand comprises a $300Million “salvage bonus” and another $300Millionfor “loss of reputation,” among other items. The claim does not factor in the cost of salvaging the Evergreen-chartered vessel, which “owners and their hull underwriters expect to receive separately.”

A total of 422 ships piled up at either end of the canal as the mega-vessel blocked it for six days

An eight-person team from Dutch marine response firm SMIT Salvage as well as a team from Japanese owned Nippon Salvage were hired by Shoei Kisen Kaisha to move the ship. The rescue operation also involved tugboats and dredgers.

The MV Ever Given, was enroute from China to the Netherlands when the accident occurred.


Mercuria Wants a Share of the Suez Canal

By Mohammed Jetutu, in Cairo

Crude oil trader, Mercuria, has expressed interest in investing in the Suez Canal, the international maritime shipping lane that is a favourite of crude oil and natural gas exporters.

The 17-year-old company, with gross turnover of $116Billion and 368Million TOE (Total trading volume) in 2019, “wants to be involved in the area because it is geographically important and is one of the most promising economic regions in the world”, according to Mustafa Madbouli, Egypt’s Prime Minister.

The Suez Canal runs through Egypt, spanning north to south from the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea.

For most of the six weeks of 2021, it has been the preferred shipping route for LNG carriers heading from the United States to East Asia and looking to avoid a highly congested Panama Canal, according to Argue Media. Shippers are finding that the shorter journey offered by Suez offsets the toll they’ll have to pay by choosing the canal over rounding the Cape of Good Hope.

Mr. Madbouli held a meeting with the Egyptian officials of the company, including Majid Shenouda, CEO of Mercuria Egypt, over the terms of Mercuria’s proposed investment. The government side at the meeting included Tariq El-Molla, Minister of Oil and Mineral Wealth, Osama Rabei, Chairman of the Suez Canal Authority, and Yahya Zaki, Chairman of the Suez Canal Economic Authority.

Mercuria is proposing to invest $450Million in ship supply, marine waste collection and water purification, as well as shipping services in the Suez Canal area. The company executives told the government officials that Mercuria has a timeline for implementation of no more than 36 months.

Mr. El Molla, the petroleum minster, disclosed that Mercuria had been in contact with the Ministry for some time, and there are many aspects of cooperation, especially since the oil sector in Egypt has the infrastructure, human skills and experiences that can be hired to serve all proposed projects.

At the end of the meeting, the Prime Minister directed the completion of the negotiation process with Mercuria operates in more than 50 countries around the world, with fixed asset size of up to $2.8Billion, according to its website.

 


Anchor Handling Tug Supply is Most Widely Used Vessel in Nigerian Offshore Oil Industry

By Favour Omokhaiye and Gloria Odunuyi

The Anchor-Handling Tug supply (AHTS) vessels constitute the largest segment of the offshore support vessel market, by type, in use by oil companies operating in Nigerian waters in the months of April and May 2020.

Nine indigenous and international oil companies working offshore utilised 150 vessels, of twenty types for various operations in the months under review.

Chevron used the largest number and the most diverse of vessel types, followed by ExxonMobil and Shell.

AHTS vessels are designed to provide anchor-handling and towage services and are also used for supplying deck cargo, water, fuel, dry bulk, and mud-to-oil rigs and platforms.

These vessels can also be used for emergencies and are well equipped for firefighting, rescue, and oil recovery operations.

But while they have high utility value, AHTS are not necessarily the most sophisticated. The Multifunctional Support Vessel, for example, has the capacity for deploying robots and divers into deep offshore, to perform field optimisation tasks in deepwater reservoirs.

Other Offshore Vessels (OSSVs) in use during the period were platform supply vessels (PSV), anchor handling tugs, utility workboat vessels, research vessels, emergency response and rescue vessels (ERRV), accommodation barges, cable/umbilicals flowline lay vessels and crew boats.

Also referred as vessels are Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO), Jack up drilling rigs and Self elevating Install Barge, The nine companies which utilised the 150 vessels during the months are: Addax, Amni International, Chevron, Dangote, ExxonMobil, First E&P, NPDC, Shell and TOTAL.

Omokhaiye and Odu are covering the maritime issues and the gas market for Africa Oil+Gas Report.

 

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