CONTAINERSHIP
capacity is growing at its lowest - 3.4 per cent - it has in 10 years when
average annual growth was nine per cent, reported Lloyd's Loading List.
Slow
as that growth is, it will not stop the containership fleet from breaking the
20 million TEU mark this year, says global shipowners group BIMCO (Baltic and
International Maritime Council).
BIMCO analyst
Peter Sand
said that while the entire box ship fleet capacity had increased nine per cent
a year from 2006, it had only increased ship numbers 3.7 per cent.
"Despite
the enormous growth of ULCS [ultra large container ships] market share, the
postpanamax fleet of 8,000-12,000 TEU is still the preferred class, accounting
for a quarter of the fleet," he said.
BIMCO
said the fleet would grow to an estimated net addition of 680,000 million TEU
this year, thus hitting the 20 million TEU mark next month.
"Over
the last decade, the fleet size in TEU increased by 240 per cent and reached
19.7 million TEU at the end of 2015," said BIMCO.
"However,
the fleet grew unevenly, displaying a shift to larger ship sizes and giving a
one-sided focus on cutting unit costs per transported TEU by having larger
ships, continuing the theme of 'bigger is better'."
The
ULCS was the main driver of growth. It constituted just 0.5 per cent of the
fleet in 2007 but now represents 18 per cent.
Source
: HKSG.
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