THE 29-year-old quasi-shipping
conference, the Transpacific Stabilisation Agreement (TSA), is closing
its doors, having found its role no longer viable in the face of radical
changes in the industry in recent years.
"During these challenging
times, it became apparent that the TSA's original mission was no longer
viable," said TSA executive administrator Brian Conrad.
"The transpacific trade and,
more broadly, ocean transportation worldwide, has experienced significant
changes in the past few years," he said.
TSA was among the first
"carrier discussion agreements" formed after passage of the US 1984 Shipping
Act. But unlike its Asia-Europe counterpart, the Far Eastern Freight
Conference, which was banned by the EU in 2008, TSA did not set rates, but
"recommended" changes to them. This would have been against the law
in Europe, but not in the United States and Canada, which the TSA served.
Said Mr Conrad: "I believe that
TSA has performed an important role over the years in supporting the
development of U.S. international trade."
Member lines of the TSA were APL (now merged with CMA
CGM), "K" Line (now bundled into ONE with NYK and MOL), CSCL (merged
into Cosco),
Maersk Line, CMA-CGM, MSC, Cosco, NYK (now bundled into ONE)
and MOL (also bundled into ONE), Evergreen Line, OOCL (soon to
be merged with Cosco), Hanjin Shipping (bankrupt), Yangming, Hapag-Lloyd, Zim and
Hyundai
Merchant Marine.
Source : HKSG.
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