bnew

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Map of ship routings around the red sea

Attacks by Yemen's Houthi militants on ships in the Red Sea are disrupting maritime trade through the Suez Canal, with some vessels re-routing to a much longer East-West route via the southern tip of Africa. Image via Reuters


African Ports Overwhelmed By Red Sea Reroutings​

Reuters
Total Views: 4743

December 22, 2023

By Wendell Roelf (Reuters) – Shipping companies sailing around the Cape of Good Hope to avoid Houthi attacks on the Red Sea face tough choices over where to refuel and restock, as African ports struggle with red tape, congestion and poor facilities, companies and analysts say.

Hundreds of large vessels are rerouting around the southern tip of Africa, a longer route adding 10-14 days of travel, to escape drone and missile attacks by Yemeni Houthis that have pushed up oil prices and freight rates.

The attacks by Iranian-backed militants have disrupted international trade through the Suez Canal, the shortest shipping route between Europe and Asia, which accounts for about a sixth of global traffic.

South Africa’s major ports, including Durban, one of Africa’s largest in terms of container volumes handled, as well as Cape Town and Ngqura ports are among the worst performing globally, a World Bank 2022 index released in May found.

“Even the state that Durban is in now, it is still the most advanced and largest port in Africa, so ships rerouting around the continent have very limited choices for berthing for replenishment,” Alessio Lencioni, a logistics and supply chain consultant told Reuters.

Other large African deep-water ports along the Cape route, such as Mombasa in Kenya and Dar es Salaam in Tanzania are too ill-equipped to handle the expected traffic over the next couple of weeks, Lencioni said.

Maersk said vessels routed around the Cape will as far as possible try to fuel at origin or destination.

“In case there is a need for bunkering en route, it would be decided on a case by case basis with Walvis Bay (Namibia) or Port Louis (Mauritius) being the top options,” a spokesperson said.



CAPE OF STORMS​

Rough weather with high seas, common at the ‘Cape of Storms’ as well as the cyclone-prone Mozambique Channel, mean ships could burn through their fuel quicker, making refueling services crucial, shippers said.

“In Singapore, we’re delivering larger bunker volumes to vessels that will now be sailing longer voyages,” a spokesperson for TFG Marine, a unit of energy trader Trafigura, said.

Bureaucracy is a concern. In September, South Africa’s National Revenue Service detained five bunkering vessels in Algoa Bay on suspicion of contravening the Customs and Excise Act. BP, Trafigura and Mercuria have all been hit by suspensions pending audits.

Since South Africa’s first ship-to-ship offshore bunkering started in Algoa Bay in 2016, there has been a sharp rise in fuel volumes and vessels using it.

A spokesperson for Heron Marine, the TFG Marine affiliate operating in Algoa Bay, said the company is working with customers to manage their bunkering requirements. Mercuria and BP BP.L did not immediately respond to questions.

In anticipation of more marine fuel being needed, imports are expected to rise to around 230 kilotonnes in December, analysts say.

“South Africa is expecting a record high of fuel oil imports for December,” because of demand for refueling linked to the Houthi crisis, Younes Azzouzi, market analyst at data and analytics specialist Kpler said.

(By Wendell Roelf, additional reporting by Jonathan Saul in LondonEditing by Tim Cocks and Barbara Lewis)
 

Conan

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I agree, Barghouti is a Mandela-like figure who could solve the governmental issues for Palestine. But the Israelis do not release high profile prisonners if they believe they have israeli bloods on their hands (I think it needs to be agreed by their supreme court or something). He always claimed he was innocent of what they accuse him of so we can only wait and see.

I don't believe it's some Hamas 4D chess though. Barghouti's name has been ringing bells for decades now and he is the preferred choice of many to lead Palestinians.

nikkas think Mandela came of prison singing Kumbaya. He was asked by the Apartheid regime to renounce violence (he and the ANC) as a precondition for being released from prison. He, like a real nikka, refused, stating that violence was not off the table until all sides agreed to stop the violence, the apartheid regime included.

We'll see if Barghouti is anything like Mandela.
 

Liu Kang

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Map of ship routings around the red sea

Attacks by Yemen's Houthi militants on ships in the Red Sea are disrupting maritime trade through the Suez Canal, with some vessels re-routing to a much longer East-West route via the southern tip of Africa. Image via Reuters


African Ports Overwhelmed By Red Sea Reroutings​

Reuters
Total Views: 4743

December 22, 2023

By Wendell Roelf (Reuters) – Shipping companies sailing around the Cape of Good Hope to avoid Houthi attacks on the Red Sea face tough choices over where to refuel and restock, as African ports struggle with red tape, congestion and poor facilities, companies and analysts say.

Hundreds of large vessels are rerouting around the southern tip of Africa, a longer route adding 10-14 days of travel, to escape drone and missile attacks by Yemeni Houthis that have pushed up oil prices and freight rates.

The attacks by Iranian-backed militants have disrupted international trade through the Suez Canal, the shortest shipping route between Europe and Asia, which accounts for about a sixth of global traffic.

South Africa’s major ports, including Durban, one of Africa’s largest in terms of container volumes handled, as well as Cape Town and Ngqura ports are among the worst performing globally, a World Bank 2022 index released in May found.

“Even the state that Durban is in now, it is still the most advanced and largest port in Africa, so ships rerouting around the continent have very limited choices for berthing for replenishment,” Alessio Lencioni, a logistics and supply chain consultant told Reuters.

Other large African deep-water ports along the Cape route, such as Mombasa in Kenya and Dar es Salaam in Tanzania are too ill-equipped to handle the expected traffic over the next couple of weeks, Lencioni said.

Maersk said vessels routed around the Cape will as far as possible try to fuel at origin or destination.

“In case there is a need for bunkering en route, it would be decided on a case by case basis with Walvis Bay (Namibia) or Port Louis (Mauritius) being the top options,” a spokesperson said.



CAPE OF STORMS​

Rough weather with high seas, common at the ‘Cape of Storms’ as well as the cyclone-prone Mozambique Channel, mean ships could burn through their fuel quicker, making refueling services crucial, shippers said.

“In Singapore, we’re delivering larger bunker volumes to vessels that will now be sailing longer voyages,” a spokesperson for TFG Marine, a unit of energy trader Trafigura, said.

Bureaucracy is a concern. In September, South Africa’s National Revenue Service detained five bunkering vessels in Algoa Bay on suspicion of contravening the Customs and Excise Act. BP, Trafigura and Mercuria have all been hit by suspensions pending audits.

Since South Africa’s first ship-to-ship offshore bunkering started in Algoa Bay in 2016, there has been a sharp rise in fuel volumes and vessels using it.

A spokesperson for Heron Marine, the TFG Marine affiliate operating in Algoa Bay, said the company is working with customers to manage their bunkering requirements. Mercuria and BP BP.L did not immediately respond to questions.

In anticipation of more marine fuel being needed, imports are expected to rise to around 230 kilotonnes in December, analysts say.

“South Africa is expecting a record high of fuel oil imports for December,” because of demand for refueling linked to the Houthi crisis, Younes Azzouzi, market analyst at data and analytics specialist Kpler said.

(By Wendell Roelf, additional reporting by Jonathan Saul in LondonEditing by Tim Cocks and Barbara Lewis)
Isn't Suez canal administered by Egypt ? I wonder how Al Sissi feels about Houtis messing with their revenue :jbhmm:
 
Last edited:

ReasonableMatic

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This thread was highly informational.
Centering the ongoing genocide and political space, but LOST NIKKAS ruined it seeking attention and validation from them DEVILS on this site.

It says a lot about how insecure you nikkas are.

Constantly seeking validation from the ppl y’all claim not to care about.

Constantly wanting to giggle in serious matters

Constantly wanting to troll.

Constantly failing to be able to stay focused.

Constantly wanting to argue with ppl whose whole purpose is to distract us from constructive and critical dialogue among our ppl.

We’ll never be free.

SMH
 
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