HMMIn another bid to prop up sliding freight rates on this overcrowded key lane, the G6 Alliance is voiding five additional sailings in the Asia-Europe trade during what is regarded as the peak season, saying this is “in response to changes in market demand.”

The alliance said the following void sailings are planned for the subsequent services and weeks: Loop 6 service, westbound on October 29, November 26, and December 24, 2015; Loop 7 service, westbound on November 2 and November 30; Loop 4 service, westbound November 13 and December 11; Loop 5 service, westbound on November 20 and December 18; and Loop 1 service, westbound January 2, 2016.

Void is Loop 6, westbound ETA Fuzhou, October 29, November 26, and December 24, 2015. Kaohsiung will be added as a westbound call, while Jebel Ali will be inserted on the eastbound leg of Loop 7. The westbound Colombo and Xiamen calls will be added into Loop 4.

Loop 7—westbound ETA Qingdao on November 2 and November 30—will have Qingdao added to Loop 4 on the westbound leg in the corresponding week, while Gdansk, Gothenburg, and Antwerp calls will be covered by Loop 5 on the eastbound direction during the same timeframe.

Loop 4 service, westbound ETA Ningbo November 13 and December 11, will feature the westbound Le Havre call covered by Loop 6 in the respective week.

Loop 5 service (westbound ETA Kwangyang November 20 and December 18) is null. The westbound Kwangyang and Pusan calls will be added in Loops 7 in the respective week.

Finally, Loop 1 service, with westbound ETA Kobe January 2, 2016, is likewise blanked.

The G6 Alliance members are APL, Hapag-Lloyd, Hyundai Merchant Marine, Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Nippon Yusen Kaisha, and Orient Overseas Container Line.

Emergency rate hike

As this developed, Hapag-Lloyd announced another rate hike attempt to take effect from September 21.

The German box liner said the planned emergency rate increase it is attributing to “the unsustainable rate levels on the Asia to Europe trade” will cover all cargoes and container types on the Far East westbound trade.

The increase will be US$550 per TEU, applicable for all shipments from East Asia (excluding Japan) to all North Europe and Mediterranean destinations.

North Europe is comprised of the Northwest Continent, the UK, Scandinavia, Baltic, and the European ports of Russia. The Mediterranean consists of the West Mediterranean, East Mediterranean, Black Sea, and North Africa.

East Asia covers Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, China, Macau, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Brunei, and the Russian Pacific Ports of Vladivostok and Vostochny.

Photo: Robot Brainz

You May Also Like

Maersk Line’s $4B purchase of Hamburg Süd gets board nod

Danish shipping giant Maersk Line’s proposed acquisition of German box carrier Hamburg Süd took another step forward with the approval April 28 by the…

Indonesian gov’t eyes $26B in 2017 budget for infra programs

The Indonesian government has allocated IDR346.6 trillion (US$26.2 billion) in the draft 2017 state budget for infrastructure development, emphasizing that economic advancement hinges on…

Updated PH Orange Book on port safety effective Jan 14

The Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) will implement on January 14 the updated and revised version of its rule book on safety, health, and environmental…

Harbor Star first-half profit balloons threefold with boom in ship calls

Marine service provider Harbor Star Shipping, Inc. (HSSI) reported a 315% increase in net income in the first half of 2016 due to more…