Ship recycling
activities at Alang in Gujarat’s Bhavnagar district have picked pace in the
last three months. Between January and March, a total of 120 old ships beached
there — nearly 80 per cent more than the number of ships that visited the yard
during the same period in 2015.
“In the last three
months of the previous financial year, we have seen a lot of activities. The
number of ships that visited Alang during this period is almost the total
number of vessels beached here during the first three quarters of 2015-16,”
said captain Sudhir Chadha, port officer at Alang, which has the world’s
largest stretch of ship breaking beaches.
Only 129 ships
beached at Alang for recycling between April 2015 and December 2015, when the
business witnessed one of the worst slumps. From January to March 2015, only 67
vessels had come to the yard.
Experts, however,
pointed out that business at Alang was far from normal, and said only 249 ships
came to the yard during 2015-16 — an eight-year low. Such lows were seen only
during the 2006-07 slowdown, when 136 ships visited Alang.
According to
shipbreakers at Alang, “poor performance” of the Baltic Dry Index — which
measures the rates paid to hire ships of different sizes to transport dry bulk
commodities — could be the reason for the rise in influx of ships. The Baltic
Dry Index hit an all-time low in February this year.
“The freight market
is down, and so it was becoming unviable for ship owners to hold onto their old
ships or operate them. Such ships were easily available in the international
markets at affordable rates to shipbreakers,” said Haresh Parmar, honorary
joint secretary of Ship Recycling Industries Association (SRIA), India.
“However, we at
Alang are still struggling. The steel prices continue to remain low, and the
infrastructure and real-estate sector continue to underperform,” said Parmar.
The worst months of
2015-16 were October and August when only four and nine ships, respectively,
came to be broken. The best month has been February 2016, when 50 ships
arrived.
Some shipbreakers
felt that the new shipbreaking policy announced by the state government have
helped them getting the much-needed finance. The new policy, announced a couple
of months after The Indian Express highlighted the plight of the shipbreakers
and the dipping business activity, ushered in a number of changes at this yard
— the government not only made it flexible for ship-breakers to resize, realign
and readjust their plots as per the requirement and size of the ship, it also
allowed extension of the plot usage period to as long as 10 years.
The policy also
made a crucial decision to link the “recycling charge” imposed by the
government on every unit of LDT or light displacement tonnage of ship broken at
Alang with the “wholesale price index of steel” for each financial year as
released by the office of Economic Advisor, Union Ministry of Commerce and
Industry.
Source: Hellenic
shipping news. 27 April 2016
http://www.hellenicshippingnews.com/gujarat-green-shoots-visible-again-as-more-old-ships-beach-at-alang/
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