Last week five European ship recycling yards
announced that they signed an agreement that establishes the European Ship
Recyclers Group (ESR). In its statement ESR said: “Our first target is to
create awareness of the recycling capacity in Europe which today is over a
million ton. We have to ensure that our member yards are on the top of the
ship-owners’ list for dismantling their ships. Our message is a clear one. If
we can handle them let’s keep the E.U. flagged ships in Europe.”
Furthermore, the Group says that it aims to
speak with one voice to the European Commission, which is responsible for the
implementation of the new E.U. Ship Recycling Regulation, and to unite all
European recycling.
The day following the establishment of ESR,
the NGO Shipbreaking Platform issued an announcement: (1) welcoming this
initiative; (2) alleging that ship owners are rejecting European recyclers under
the false pretext that there is no recycling capacity in Europe; (3)
reaffirming ESR’s claim that the European Union yards have a combined capacity
of 1.1 million LDT; (4) stating that almost all European yards had said to the
Platform that, if they would be promised an increased market share of the
commercially owned vessels, they would invest to enlarge their facilities; and
(5) calling for European legislation to oblige all ships visiting European
ports to pay a Ship Recycling Licence to finance the closing of the price gap
with South Asia.
It is understandable that European ship
recyclers wish to maximize any opportunity that the European Ship Recycling
Regulation may offer them. However, I think that the new organisation is
getting carried away with its own marketing and the views of the Platform.
The starting point for understanding the
market for the recycling of commercial ships is to study the scrap steel
market. The European Union has been the largest net exporter of scrap steel in
the world, having overtaken the U.S., which is currently the second largest net
exporter.
Seen in this light, the idea of recycling
ships for their steel in Europe (or in the U.S.), in order to export ferrous
scrap to Turkey1 (which is the destination of 58.8 percent of E.U.’s scrap
steel exports in 2015), to India (10.4 percent of E.U.’s exports) and to
Pakistan (7.2 percent) is plainly absurd and not worth serious consideration.
Nevertheless, this is exactly what the ESR and the NGO are saying in their
public statements.
Each of the 18 European recycling yards that
applied and that have already been included in the European List of approved
yards, had to declare in their applications the maximum annual tonnage they
have recycled in the last decade. This is what is termed as the ship recycling
capacity by the European Regulation, as well as by Hong Kong Convention.
Naturally, this metric results in an
overestimate of true current capacity as, for some of the yards their maximum
annual tonnage may reflect capacity of a few years ago that is no longer there.
In fact, amongst the 18 E.U. yards currently appearing in the European List
there are yards that are not currently recycling ships. In any case, the self
declared maximum annual capacity of the 18 European yards is 303,065 LDT2, and
definitely not the wishful figure of 1.1 million LDT that is claimed by ESR and
the NGO.
We have to assume that the people who run the
European ship recycling yards must be capable businessmen. How then can they
keep a straight face when saying they have to ensure that their member yards
are on the top of the shipowners’ list for dismantling their ships? Even
forgetting Chinese and South Asian yards, why on earth should any owner of an
ocean-going ship not sell his ship to a Turkish recycling yard for multiples of
the price offered by E.U. yards?
The European ship recycling yards are not,
and will not be the destination for end of life ocean-going commercial ships.
Instead, the real market for European ship recyclers is made up of: E.U.
government ships; ships that are immobilised in E.U. ports because of damage;
and, primarily, the plethora of smaller European based ships and boats for
which repositioning to South Asia, China and even Turkey would be impractical
and economically prohibitive.
To get a feel of the magnitude of the small
ship market we may examine the size distribution of the world fleet3. At the
end of December 2015 there were 111,806 ships over 100 Gross Tons in the world.
If we make the reasonable assumption that ships below 3,000 GT are not likely
to travel a great distance to a recycling yard, this means that 75,998 ships
between 100 GT and 2,999 GT, or 68 percent of the world fleet’s ships, will be
recycled in local yards.
A similar proportion of the fleet trading in
European waters should also be expected to be recycled in European yards. To
these ships one should add the vast number of boats below 100 GT. This is the
natural market for European ship recyclers, and it would appear wiser for ESR
to concentrate on these ships rather than support the unreal propositions of
the Platform.
Dr Nikos Mikelis is non-executive director of
cash buyer GMS.
1 “World Steel Recycling in Figures
2011-2015” Bureau of International Recycling, Ferrous Division.
2
ec.europa.eu/environment/waste/ships/list.htm
3 “World Fleet Statistics 2015”, IHS Maritime
& Trade 2016
Source:
maritime-executive.
15 March 2017
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