MSC’s global scale enables standalone network coverage

Mediterranean Shipping Co.’s ability to roll out a standalone east-west ocean network able to compete with the reshaped alliances, and to offer both Red Sea and Suez Canal service options, indicates the immense scale the carrier has built over the last few years.

The world’s largest container carrier will exit its 2M Alliance with Maersk that expires in January next year, and in preparation for its new direction unveiled this week a comprehensive network coverage plan, coupled with two slot-swap agreements, that MSC described as “independent, competitive and complete.”

With a fleet capacity of 6 million TEUs at its disposal and another 2 million TEUs on the order book the Geneva-based carrier will deploy its vessels on services across the major trade lanes, using strategic slot-sharing deals to plug any loopholes.

“We are announcing a comprehensive standalone network and coupling with that two slot swaps [with the new Premier Alliance and Zim Integrated Shipping Services],” MSC CEO Soren Toft told the Journal of Commerce this week.

“We believe we can give a better extended product than being 100% on our own,” he added.

MSC will provide the independent network beginning in February, wielding “full operational control” over 34 loops across five trades: Asia-North America West Coast (four), Asia-North America East Coast (six), Asia-Europe (seven), Asia-Mediterranean (six) and trans-Atlantic (11).

The carrier will offer customers separate routings via the Suez Canal and the Cape of Good Hope, providing over 1,900 direct port pairs on the Suez option and over 1,800 around southern Africa.

Toft said the Red Sea and Suez options for Asia-Europe, Asia-Med and Asia-East Coast were included to cover fourth-quarter contract negotiations on the trade lanes, although he did not expect any change in the Red Sea situation by the time the new network is rolled out in February.

Details please refer to JOC news.

Source:

Knowler, G. (2024, September 12). MSC’s Global Scale enables standalone network coverage. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/mscs-global-scale-enables-standalone-network-coverage-5726563

 

Typhoon Yagi slams Vietnam, southwest China, delaying sailings

Ocean carriers and shippers are facing several days’ delays to vessel sailing schedules after typhoon Yagi struck southwest China and northern Vietnam over the weekend, closing ports and hitting cargo shipments.

Exporters in northern Vietnam are facing extensive disruption after the storm, which struck Saturday with winds of more than 120 miles per hour, damaged factories, brought down power lines and caused widespread flooding around the port city of Haiphong.

The typhoon, Asia’s most powerful cyclone this year, also killed at least 60 people in China and Vietnam, according to media reports.

Highlighting the impact on vessel schedules, OOCL said 13 ships operating intra-Asia and longer-haul services calling at Hong Kong, Nansha and Yantian and Shekou in Shenzhen are facing sailing delays of up to two days.

But to mitigate the schedule disruption and port closures, OOCL said the container yard cut-off has been extended by up to four days for some of the sailings to help shippers export their cargoes.

The vessels include the 14,846-TEU CMA CGM Pride operating the Transpacific Latin Pacific 2 loop which is now not due to depart Hong Kong until Wednesday, 48 hours later than scheduled.

Ocean Network Express (ONE) said Monday some vessels calling at Haiphong are facing up to a three-day delay.

These include the 1,708-TEU Pearl River Bridge operating the Japan-Vietnam-Haiphong service, which is now scheduled to call at Haiphong Tuesday instead of Saturday. The vessel has already been held up due to congestion at Busan from the impact of typhoon Shanshan, which hit Japan two weeks ago.

Terminal operators including Hutchison Port Holdings and Modern Terminals in Hong Kong said operations were suspended for about 24 hours on Thursday and Friday.

A spokesperson for the Tan Cang Hai Phong International Container Terminal Company, controlled by the state-owned Saigon Newport Corporation, said the port of Haiphong closed on Saturday and Sunday. The spokesperson told the Journal of Commerce there were no reports of injury or damage within the terminal.

Some companies in Vietnam said it would take at least a month to resume production, while officials said nearly 100 enterprises were affected by the typhoon, the state-controlled newspaper Lao Dong said.

Source:

Wallis, K. (2024, September 9). Typhoon yagi slams Vietnam, Southwest China, delaying sailings. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/typhoon-yagi-slams-vietnam-southwest-china-delaying-sailings-5723974

New strings attached – shipping shapes up for 2025 with Premier Alliance launch

The structure of the global container shipping alliance next year is set for a further shake-up after MSC unveiled its new standalone east-west service network and revealed it has concluded a vessel-sharing agreement (VSA) with THE Alliance, covering nine Asia-Europe services

The pivot point is February 2025, when the 2M partnership of MSC and Maersk is set to disband, while at the same time Hapag-Lloyd will depart THE Alliance to form the Gemini Cooperation with Maersk – at which point, the remaining three THE Alliance carriers – ONE, Yang Ming and HMM – will rebrand as the Premier Alliance and enter into a slot-share agreement with MSC covering the Asia-Europe trades.

In a parallel development, MSC has also signed a three-year VSA with Zim on the transpacific trade.

“We are very pleased to announce this new strategic partnership with MSC, who is the leading carrier in the Asia-Europe trade,” ONE chief executive Jeremy Nixon said.

“Collectively, the Premier Alliance and MSC, will be able to offer a very capable and extensive network of end-to-end port services to its customers from February 2025.

“We look forward to this new cooperation with MSC, and both collaborating on our respective joint operational expertise and combined network synergies,” he added.

Meanwhile, today also saw Israeli carrier ZIM announce that it and MSC had concluded a vessel-sharing agreement on the Asia-North America east coast trade.

In concert with the agreement, the Premier Alliance carriers published their new network for 2025, and MSC did likewise, including the remaining deepsea trades where it intends to continue as a standalone carrier.

According to ONE, the Premier Alliance members are set to offer six transpacific services into the US Pacific South-west, and three into the Pacific north-west range, as well as four Asia-North America east coast services.

In a related development, MSC and Zim have signed a three-year VSA agreement between Asia and the North America east and Gulf coast services, covering MSC’s six services on the trade – the America/Z7S, Emerald/ZXB, Empire/ZNS, Amberjack/ZCP, Lone Star/ZGC, and Pelican/ZSL, while Zim’s two transpacific express services between China and California will remain independent.

“This important collaboration reflects ZIM’s commitment to both delivering an outstanding shipping solution to its customers, and taking continuous proactive steps to enhance efficiencies in our network,” Zim president and chief executive Eli Glickman said.

“It is the direct outcome of our fleet renewal programme which has greatly enhanced Zim’s competitive position, particularly on the Asia to US East Coast trade.

“We are pleased to, once again, join forces with MSC, an industry leader and Zim’s long-standing trusted partner, to augment our network while upholding our customer-centric approach and commitment to the highest levels of service,” he added.

Details please refer to the Loadstar news.

Source:

Marle, G. van. (2024, September 9). New strings attached – shipping shapes up for 2025 with Premier Alliance launch. The Loadstar. https://theloadstar.com/new-strings-attached-shape-up-for-2025-with-premier-alliance-launch/

 

Rail container dwells in Seattle-Tacoma still high, but relief in sight

The port congestion and elevated rail container dwell times that have been a fact of life in the Pacific Northwest for weeks appear to be peaking and some relief is expected later this month. Until then, however, shippers will be forced to contend with delays in the movement of intermodal containers to inland destinations.

Rail container dwell times at marine terminals in the Northwest Seaport Alliance (NWSA) of Seattle and Tacoma have doubled in recent weeks as intermodal container moves spiked amid peak season imports.

Retailers shifted some discretionary import volumes to the Pacific Northwest gateway because of concerns over strike threats by Teamsters Union rail workers in Canada and by East and Gulf coast dockworkers amid the coming expiration of their contract at the end of this month.

US imports from Asia increased almost 51% in July 2024 from July 2023, according to PIERS, a Journal of Commerce sister company within S&P Global. The import surge strained the capacity of the western railroads and terminal operators in the NWSA.

“No mode can accommodate that kind of volatility without disruption,” rail industry analyst Lawrence Gross, president and founder of Gross Transportation, told the Journal of Commerce last week.

Details please refer to JOC news.

Source:

Ashe, A., & Mongelluzzo, B. (2024, September 6). Rail container dwells in Seattle-tacoma still high, but relief in sight. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/rail-container-dwells-in-seattle-tacoma-still-high-but-relief-in-sight-5721796

 

ILA locals prepping for coordinated strike at US East, Gulf coast ports

Teaneck, NJ — The International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) on Thursday appointed local vice presidents to head committees that will coordinate labor actions at East and Gulf coast ports if a new contract isn’t reached by the end of the month. Union leadership the day prior warned the ILA and its employers are “very, very far apart” on “economic” terms, namely wages, as well as automation.

The 13 committees are part of a strike mobilization plan outlined during a two-day meeting in Teaneck, NJ, where local union officials threw their support behind the union’s executive leadership negotiating stance against maritime employers, represented by the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX).

In a video message posted on YouTube Wednesday, ILA Executive Vice President Dennis Daggett said the union and employers are “at an impasse.” As of Thursday, no bargaining talks have been scheduled between the ILA and USMX, according to sources familiar with the negotiations.

“We can’t even get past the economics of a new contract,” Dennis Daggett said. “We are very, very far apart. Our members showed the world just how valuable our work is during the pandemic, and the carriers and terminals came out of that time with record profits, and they don’t want to share that with our members.”

Wages are a key sticking point in the current contract talks. The ILA is reportedly looking for a 78% increase in its top wage rate, or a $5 per hour increase each year over the contract’s six-year term. The USMX, which represents terminal operators and ocean carriers in ILA contract negotiations, is said to be offering an increase of about half of that, approximately 40%. During the previous two agreements, the ILA secured a $1 per hour wage increase each year.

“Sisters and brothers, it will be monumental if we are without a new master contract to replace the current one that expires in three weeks and four days,” ILA President Harold Daggett said in prepared remarks to the meeting. “We must be prepared if we have to hit the streets on Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024.”

Details please refer to JOC news.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, September 5). ILA locals prepping for coordinated strike at US East, Gulf Coast Ports. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ila-locals-prepping-for-coordinated-strike-at-us-east-gulf-coast-ports-5721164

Carriers to deploy ‘extra-loaders’ to Los Angeles-Long Beach amid import surge

Ocean carriers in the eastbound trans-Pacific are scheduled to deploy 28 “extra-loader” vessels to the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach over the next two months in response to heavy import volumes expected to land at the US’ busiest gateway during peak shipping season.

The added capacity — 14 extra loaders at each port — comes amid an anticipated boost in discretionary cargo diverted from ports along the US East and Gulf coasts as shippers protect themselves from potential longshore labor disruption in those regions.

Ports on the US West Coast may also see an uptick in freight diverted from Vancouver considering the rail labor issues north of the border are not fully settled.

“If people are worried about ILA [International Longshoremen’s Association] action, and have the ability to do so, they’ve moved things over to the West Coast,” a freight forwarder told the Journal of Commerce. “By and large though, shippers moved peak [freight] early.”

While those developments are helping to drive more import volumes to the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the main force behind the cargo surge is the strength of the US economy, especially consumer demand, according to Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc.

“I have been impressed by the resilience of demand,” Clerc said during an interview Tuesday at the naming ceremony for the dual-fuel container ship Alette Maersk in Los Angeles. “I expect continued resilient demand through the end of the year.”

The threat of a strike by the ILA at East and Gulf coast ports when the union’s coastwide contract expires on Sept. 30 will have only “a little bit” to do with the import volumes expected to move through Southern California in the coming months, said Gene Seroka, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles.

“It’s the strength of the US economy” that is by far the main driver of import growth, Seroka said at the Maersk event.

Details please refer to JOC news.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (n.d.). Carriers to deploy “extra-loaders” to Los Angeles-Long Beach amid import surge. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/carriers-to-deploy-extra-loaders-to-los-angeles-long-beach-amid-import-surge-5714861

Rail strike Canada 2024: Latest updates on work stoppage

With Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB)  imposed a binding arbitration, it ordered the rail employees back to work to end the dispute that shut down the country’s two major railways.

Statement update as below:

CPKC: https://www.cpkcr.com/en/media/TCRC-bargaining-updates

CN: https://www.cn.ca/en/news/2024/08/cn-receives-order-of-binding-arbitration

 

Canadian ports, liner operators bracing for rail strike impact

Operations at Canada’s West Coast ports are slowing down vessel operations ahead of a potential rail strike that threatens to strand thousands of intermodal containers at terminals already reaching capacity. The country’s East Coast ports can absorb some cargo, but not for a prolonged work stoppage by Canadian rail workers.

As of late Wednesday, no agreement on a new contract has been reached between Canada’s two Class I railroads and the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC), which represents over 9,000 conductors, engineers and other trades. In the absence of a new agreement, Canadian National Railway (CN) and Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) said they would lock out TCRC workers as of Thursday.

A shutdown of the railroads would directly impact Canada’s ports, most of which handle a high percentage of intermodal cargo going into the US. After both railroads started embargoing freight earlier this week, Canada’s major ports and container lines began offering workarounds for shippers and making contingency plans for container backlogs and berth delays.

The Vancouver Fraser Port Authority (VFPA) said in a statement to the Journal of Commerce that ocean carriers are being asked to slow down ships scheduled to arrive at the port to avoid vessel congestion.

Only four ships are at Vancouver’s berths with two vessels waiting to berth, according to the VFPA’s maritime data. Current vessel schedules for Global Container Terminals’ (GCT’s) Deltaport terminal show 20 ships are expected to arrive through Sept. 18. GCT’s Vanterm is expected to receive 11 ships through the same period of time.

Vancouver’s intermodal rail yard is already reaching capacity as measured by dwell time. VFPA data shows that intermodal boxes are sitting for five to seven days on dock, compared with four days in July.

“The impact to the Port of Vancouver will be significant, with approximately two-thirds of all cargo volumes at the port moved by rail, including 90% of international exports,” the VFPA’s statement said. “It took many months to clear the backlog of congestion from the 13-day strike by BC longshore workers in 2023 at the Port of Vancouver, with delayed shipments and overburdened infrastructure struggling to restore normalcy.”

GCT said in a statement to the Journal of Commerce that railcar supply to Vancouver has improved in recent weeks, allowing its Vancouver terminals to work down their backlog. However, GCT said its terminals will start seeing impacts should a strike last longer than a couple of days.

“Our terminals are now fluid, but any rail service outage greater than 48 hours will severely impact the fluidity,” GCT said.

DP World’s Centerm terminal in Vancouver is scheduled for 17 vessel arrivals through mid-September. Its Prince Rupert terminal, which is entirely rail-served, is expected to see 22 ship arrivals through the end of September.

While a potential strike would mean containers cannot be brought into terminals, cargo owners would be permitted to retrieve cargo that reached the destination terminal. For now, any work action would not impact terminal workers who load cargo onto trucks, or the gate operators letting drivers in and out of the terminal. Any cargo en route when a potential strike begins at 12:01 a.m. on Thursday would be held where it is located until the labor dispute is resolved. Part of the wind down in operations includes getting as much cargo to destination terminals on Wednesday or holding the cargo at official crew change locations rather than unsecured locations.

Ocean carriers weigh options

Ocean carriers have yet to completely halt liner services in Canada but are preparing workarounds for a rail strike. Maersk said Wednesday it will still accept bookings to Canadian ports along with inland destinations, but it’s reviewing “contingency actions.”

Hapag-Lloyd said Wednesday it will not take any export bookings from US inland destinations that are routed through Canada. For any intermodal cargo destined for Canadian ports, Hapag-Lloyd said it would provide other workarounds such trucking, subject to a $400 fee and the cost difference for the surface transportation leg.

CMA CGM is telling shippers to expect vessels to be diverted to US ports and plans to halt bookings for inland destinations served by rail, according to a report from ContainerXchange.

A US-based ocean carrier executive told the Journal of Commerce that he expects container lines will have to divert vessels or completely halt bookings to Western Canada because Vancouver and Prince Rupert will not have enough room to store intermodal cargo. Canada’s East Coast ports, however, have room to handle stranded intermodal cargo for about two weeks before they hit capacity.

“West Coast ports are operating at high capacity and have much less flexibility, essentially the ships alongside now at the start of a strike will be the last vessels worked,” the executive said.

The Port of Montreal’s overall container volumes are down slightly this year, providing it with buffer capacity to handle stranded intermodal containers. In addition, the Montreal Port Authority (MPA) said in a statement to the Journal of Commerce that it is looking at longer gate hours so more trucks can move intermodal cargo out of its terminals.

However, the MPA said that certain rail-served markets such as Ontario and the greater Toronto region “will face major challenges” if a strike commences.

A spokesperson for the Port of Halifax told the Journal of Commerce that while it is still receiving vessels, it expects “significant impacts if we have a rail service interruption.”

“Rail serves approximately 60% of containerized cargo business at the Port of Halifax,” the spokesperson said. “Canadian gateways have already seen a reduction of volumes due to the uncertainty around rail operations. We encourage all parties to work towards a resolution.”

Customers who use CN and CPKC outside Canada will not be impacted because the engineers and conductors are not TCRC members. Routes such as CPKC’s Mexico Midwest Express, the Falcon Premium between Mexico and Detroit, and CN’s trains between the US Gulf Coast and US Midwest will operate normally.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024b, August 21). Canadian ports, liner operators bracing for rail strike impact. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/canadian-ports-liner-operators-bracing-for-rail-strike-impact-5708554

Canadian rail strike set for Thursday

Canada looks set to be hit by industrial action at its two main freight rail companies from this Thursday as employers and employees made their positions clear over the weekend with no deals in sight over labour agreements.

Canadian National Railway formally notified the Teamsters union in Canada on Sunday that it would start locking out union workers early on Thursday.

“Unless there is an immediate and definite resolution to the labour conflict, CN will have no choice but to continue the phased and progressive shutdown of its network which would culminate in a lockout,” it said in a statement.

“Despite negotiations over the weekend, no meaningful progress has occurred, and the parties remain very far apart.”

Canada’s other main rail operator, Canadian Pacific Kansas City, has already told the Teamsters union it will start locking out members early on Thursday.

The Teamsters also issued a 72-hour strike notice to CPKC late on Sunday.

“Unless parties reach last-minute agreements, a work stoppage will occur at 00:01 on Thursday, August 22,” it said in a statement.

From tomorrow, CPKC has said it will stop all shipments that start in Canada and all shipments originating in the US that are headed for Canada, the railroad said.

CN, meanwhile, has barred container imports from US partner railroads.

Both rail companies’ labour agreements expired at the end of 2023 and talks have been ongoing since.

Both companies have said that their trains running in the US will continue to work.

Details please refer to Splash news.

Source:

Chambers, S. (2024, August 19). Canadian rail strike set for Thursday. Splash247. https://splash247.com/canadian-rail-strike-set-for-thursday/

Ottawa rejects call to head off Canada rail work stoppage

The decision by Canada’s labor minister to not intervene in contract talks between the country’s Class I railroads and unions has upped the risk of a work stoppage within the next week, and both railroads have stopped accepting containerized freight in response.

Labor Minister Steve MacKinnon declined a request by Canadian National Railway (CN) to invoke a labor law the railroad had argued would “secure industrial peace” in contract talks with Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC), his office said in a letter sent Thursday.

CN made the request in early August, asking MacKinnon to force both sides to accept an agreement negotiated through binding arbitration because the union “has not engaged meaningfully at the negotiating table.”

In the letter, MacKinnon’s office said it’s up CN to bargain with the union, but that Canada’s mediation services would be able to help.

“It is your shared responsibility — Canadian National Railway Company and the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference — to negotiate in good faith and work diligently towards a new collective agreement,” the ministry wrote.

In November 2022, US President Joe Biden intervened to prevent a nationwide strike by union rail workers and brokered a tentative deal that was eventually approved by rank-and-file.

Phasing shutdowns

In response to the letter, CN said Thursday it has begun a phased shutdown of its Canadian network, adding that if no deal is struck with TCRC, it will lock out employees on Aug. 22. CN continued to argue that binding arbitration is necessary because it has made four offers to TCRC since January without a counteroffer.

“A prolonged shutdown of rail operations will have a significant impact on supply chains: creating delays, possible shortages and increasing costs,” CN said in a statement. Earlier this week, the railroad informed shippers that it would not be accepting new loads of hazardous materials.

On Friday, CN will extend the embargo to include intermodal cargo from several origins and destinations. That includes dry containers going from or to the ports of New York and New Jersey and Philadelphia, containers it interchanges with CSX Transportation that originate in the Ohio Valley, interchange cargo with Norfolk Southern Railway to the US West and East Coasts, and its joint Canada-US-Mexico service with Union Pacific and Ferromex.

The potential lockout would come just 13 days after the Canadian Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) issued a decision that railroad services would not be considered essential to public safety and health.

Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) on Thursday likewise said it will lock employees out on Aug. 22 if a deal is not reached. CPKC also said it would stop accepting new shipments of hazardous materials, though it will allow non-hazardous intermodal containers to be brought to its terminals until those facilities are full.

The largest impact of a lockout would likely be seen at the Port of Vancouver, Canada’s busiest container port, Scott Shannon, vice president of CH Robinson, told the Journal of Commerce. He said Vancouver already has a backlog of roughly 13,000 intermodal containers from previous rail slowdowns due to a port strike and wildfires in 2023 that disrupted train service.

Ships coming into Vancouver should still be able to discharge, and shippers should be able to transload freight to trucks, Shannon noted. However, he warned that if containers are not retrieved from Vancouver’s terminals in a timely manner, the port will become congested quickly given the absence of regular train service.

“The rail ramps there have been almost continually congested since the summer of 2023,” Shannon said. “Vancouver just hasn’t been able to catch a break or catch up.”

The Port of Prince Rupert receives the vast majority of its cargoes via CN.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, August 15). Ottawa rejects call to head off Canada rail work stoppage. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ottawa-rejects-call-head-canada-rail-work-stoppage_20240815.html