Scrapping of merchant vessels from the
global fleet in this year’s first nine months exceeded the annual record set in
1985 after returns plunged, according to Clarkson Plc, the world’s largest
shipbroker.
A total of 960 vessels with capacity
of 44.1 million deadweight tons were sold for demolition through September, the
London-based company estimated in a monthly report published today. That will
climb to 57 million tons by the end of the year, Clarkson said.
“Much of this increased activity has
been due to the challenging earnings environment, which has been exacerbated by
the continued issue of vessel oversupply,” the shipbroker said. “This has not
only led many owners to consider scrapping more vessels, but also younger
vessels.”
Scrapping came to 42.6 million tons
for all of 1985, Clarkson said. A total of 1,955 new ships with capacity of
124.7 million tons left yards and entered service in this year’s first nine
months, the report showed.
Daily average returns for Capesize
vessels, the biggest iron-ore carriers, plunged 44 percent from the start of
the year to $13,430, according to the Baltic Exchange in London. The largest
oil tankers plying the benchmark Saudi Arabia-to-Japan route are losing $4,252
a day, its assessments show.
Source: By Michelle Wiese Bockmann. 18
October 2012
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-10-18/ship-demolitions-seen-above-1985-record-amid-plunging-returns.html
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