India: Vessel scrapping
volumes were 'relatively weak' during last decade's shipping market boom, with
an average of 6.1 million dwt reported recycled per year in the period from
2005 to 2007. However, the global recession contributed to an upturn in
demolition volumes and a record 58.4 million dwt was reportedly recycled in
2012, according to Clarkson Research.
Demolition levels
'remain strong' and 47.1 million dwt was recycled last year, according to the
researcher. In the first seven months of the current year, meanwhile, 21.6
million dwt was reportedly scrapped - quite close to the long-term average of
24.9 million dwt demolished per year in the period from 1996 to 2013.
The majority of vessels
have been demolished by shipbreakers in the Indian sub-continent. Scrap yards
in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan accounted for over 70% of the tonnage in the
first seven months of 2014.
In recent years, Indian breakers have typically
demolished the largest proportion and handled 30% of global scrap volumes
between 2010 and 2013.
'Currency volatility and
political instability saw Indian breakers' share of demolition fall to 25% last
year, but their share is up at 33% in the year to date,' Clarkson Research
reports. In dwt terms, Bangladeshi scrap yards accounted for almost 60% of the
demolition volumes between 2005 and 2008, but environmental disputes and
competition have limited their activity to 18% of global scrap volumes in the
year to date.
Pakistani breakers,
meanwhile, have cornered an increasing share of the global demolition market,
with their proportion rising from an average of 5% in the 2005-2008 period to
20% in 2013. And in the first seven months of 2014, their scrapping total was
reportedly 4.6 million dwt.
'Chinese scrap
facilities have generally been less able to compete on price with breakers in
the Indian sub-continent due to the higher labour and yard costs compared to
beaching,' Clarkson Research states. 'On average, Chinese breakers scrapped 8%
of the total tonnage between 2005 and 2008.'
And yet a narrowing of
the scrap price differential between the Far East and the Indian sub-continent
has helped increase their share of demolition volumes to an average of 21% for
the 2009-2013 period, surging to 24% - or 11.2 million dwt - in 2013.
Source:
recycling international. 16 September
2014
http://www.recyclinginternational.com/recycling-news/8176/research-and-legislation/india/indian-sub-continent-tops-shipbreaking-league
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