Plummeting freight rates
and associated lower profits
are converting the once
promising West African
sea trade into a pull-out
situation.
According to reports,
such is the unprofitably
that three major shipping
lines have withdrawn their
vessels and diverted them to
other routes in the past four
months.
Ships & Ports, for
example, reported that the
“crashing freight rates” had
forced Nippon Yusen Kaisha
(NYK) to pull out in the
face of a double-jeopardy
scenario – low freight rates
and declining volumes. One
of the top Japanese shipping
lines, it operated the Asia-
West Africa (WAX) service
together with Hapag-Lloyd
and Gold Star Line (GSL).
Taiwan’s Evergreen Line
followed suit. Its West
African shipping agency,
Hull Blyth, talked about
a “disparity between rate
levels and costs” as being
behind its three-yearold
WA1 service on the
trade pulling out. “Rate
levels, especially from
Asia, have fallen over
50% in the period with
the cost levels remaining
disproportionate,” the
agency added.
Another top Japanese
shipping line, Mitsui OSK
Line (MOL),
has also
withdrawn
from the
West Africa
trade and
restricted
its Africa
schedules to
Asia-East
Africa and
Asia-SA.
Trade
on the
westbound
route from Asia to West
Africa is definitely on
a decline, according to
UK-based maritime
analyst, Drewry Shipping
Consultants. “More lines
will quit the route as
container volumes continue
to fall,” it said, predicting
reduced vessel load factors
and declining freight rates
as carriers fight to hold
market share. Drewry also
noted that capacity growth
had been curbed, with the
monthly count of available
westbound slots “generally
static”.
Things started to go
wrong last year, according to
Container Trades Statistics.
It showed, for
example, that
westbound
volumes
from Asia
decreased
in nine of
the first
ten months
of 2015
compared
with the
previous year
– with the
latter months
recording declines of about
10%.
But it’s not an overall
West African problem,
according to Jose Jardim
of Hamburg Süd, with a
recently introduced service
faring well. He did admit
that volumes were not as
bustling as they had been,
with the global slowdown a
main driver. But, he added,
the real crash has been
more confined to the oildependent
states of Nigeria
and Angola.
“With about 90% of their
foreign exchange coming
from oil exports, the slump
in oil prices has obviously
left them with little money
to pay for imports,” Jardim
told FTW.
Indeed, electronic sister
publication, FTWOnline,
reported that growth in
Nigeria for the fourth
quarter slowed to 2.1% due
to crude oil revenue falling
and the manufacturing
sector struggling.
Cargo volumes have
dropped by more than
30% in a year, according to
Drewry, and the Nigerian
naira has lost more than
100% of its value in less
than two years – which has
exacerbated pressures on
shipping lines and terminal
operators.
Jardim also pointed to
similar problems in Angola,
with figures showing that
imports from the East Coast
of South America (ECSA) to
Luanda had dropped about
40% because of a lack of US
dollars to pay for them.
“It’s got to the stage where
some South American
shippers are stopping
shipments because even
letters of credit (LOCs)
are not being honoured,”
he said. “But I expect oil
prices to steadily climb over
time, which would improve
things.”
Glen Delve, marketing
director of MSC in SA,
agreed that the low oil prices
had affected Nigeria and
Angola, “But,” he told FTW,
“Nigeria is not too bad, not
as much as Angola.”
And he saw good signs in
other parts of West Africa.
“The MSC West African
hub, the Lome Container
Terminal (LCT) in Togo, for
example, is booming and
volumes from Asia are very
satisfactory.” This terminal
has an annual capacity of
2.2 million TEUs), and is the
gateway to the landlocked
countries of Mali, Niger and
Burkina Faso and to the
northern areas of Nigeria.
“In West Africa in general
volumes have dropped off
somewhat, but we’re more than
holding our own,” Delve added.
INSERT & CAPTION
The real crash has
been more confined
to the oil-dependent
states of Nigeria and
Angola.
– Jose Jardim
Lines pull out of ailing West Africa trade
18 Mar 2016 - by Alan Peat
0 Comments
FTW - 18 Mar 16

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