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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Blue Water acquires Reefer90’s to strengthen position in UK market

Posted on: March 14th, 2025

For many years, Blue Water has cooperated strongly with Reefer90’s, especially in the UK market. Reefer 90’s has, for more than 30 years, built a solid reefer business comprising containerised exports, imports and cross-trade. Now, Reefer90s will become part of Blue Water Shipping. “With the acquisition of Reefer90’s we have strengthened our position in the UK market. There are strong synergies between the two companies; we are both based on long-term relations customer relationships, and we already serve many of the same customers. We are delighted with the acquisition – and all staff and the three co-owners will now be part of Blue Water,” states Frank Madsen, Sr Vice President, Reefer Solutions at Blue Water.

Further Liverpool Port Strike Action

Posted on: November 2nd, 2022

Container operations are due to resume at the Port of Liverpool on Monday 7th November from 0600 hours.

Communication from the Workers Union has now confirmed a further period of strike action which will take place between 0600 Hrs Monday 14th November through to 0600 Hrs on Monday 21st November 2022.

Liverpool dock workers to stage two more weeks of strikes

Posted on: October 17th, 2022

The Unite union has said almost 600 port workers will walk out again from October 24 to November 7, following industrial action over recent weeks.

Current industrial action, which began on 11 October, is due to come to an end on 17 October.

Liverpool Port Strike

Posted on: September 30th, 2022

Liverpool dockworkers are to stage a second walkout, from 11-17 October, after negotiations with the Peel Ports-operated terminal failed.

The Unite union announced the next strike with five days left of the current industrial action.

Felixstowe port workers set for second strike in pay dispute

Posted on: September 14th, 2022

A new eight-day strike looms over pay at the UK’s largest container port, Felixstowe, threatening further disruption to imports as retailers stock up before Christmas.

The Unite union has announced the strike will begin at 7am on 27 September, and run until 6.59am on 5 October, after port workers rejected a 7% pay deal offered by management. It threatens to cause fresh disruption to UK supply chains after the shocks of Brexit and the Covid pandemic.

Liverpool Port Strike

Posted on: August 17th, 2022

Dockworkers at the UK’s port of Liverpool have voted to strike over wages, threatening to slow trade flows and inflict more pain on a British economy already facing labor and logistics strains.

Liverpool, owned by Peel Ports, is Britain’s fourth-largest gateway for seaborne trade and a vital stop for transatlantic commerce. No timetable was specified, but any work stoppage will add to disruptions that are expected from an eight-day strike planned later this month at Felixstowe, the country’s busiest container terminal.

Dock strike at Felixstowe ‘inevitable’, after last-ditch pay talks break down

Posted on: August 9th, 2022

Talks at ACAS to avert a strike at the UK’s biggest container port, Felixstowe broke down last night, both sides blaming the other. There are no further meetings planned before the eight-day strike starts on 21 August, and shipping lines plan to reschedule calls at the port, some carriers looking at bringing ships in earlier to discharge UK imports.

Potential Felixstowe Port Strike

Posted on: August 4th, 2022

Potential strike action could take place at Felixstowe port this month after the overwhelming majority of port workers balloted in favour of going ahead to cease operations.

Although no dates have been confirmed, and the negotiations between the Port and Unite are still ongoing, if the strikes go ahead this will cause considerable disruption to the port and its services and have a negative impact on UK supply chains.

Container Reliability Hits New Record Low

Posted on: February 9th, 2022

In its latest Global Liner Performance report, Sea Intelligence says that up to December 2021, container shipping line schedule reliability dropped again, this time by -1.2 percentage points on a month-to-month basis to 32.0%; the lowest ever global schedule reliability since the maritime analysis company started the measurement in 2011.

On a year-to-year basis, schedule reliability was 12.5 percentage points lower, reports Sea-Intelligence. Despite the low schedule reliability in 2021, there has not been much fluctuation, with the global scores hovering between 32%-40% for the most part. The average delay for late vessel arrivals increased to 7.33 days, the fifth consecutive month with the delay figure above 7 days.

Among the world’s 14 largest container lines, Maersk had the highest reliability, with 46.2%. Maersk-owned Hamburg Süd came in second with 41%. MSC is third, followed by Hapag-Lloyd.

Five carriers had schedule reliability of under 20%, with Evergreen recording the lowest December 2021 schedule reliability figure of 14.3%. Asian container lines usually have low reliability rates as a large part of their business take place on the route to the USA via the Pacific Ocean which is the most strained route of all.

Virus rules hit Hong Kong Air Freight

Posted on: January 11th, 2022

Things went from bad to worse for airfreight shippers and forwarders in Hong Kong, as the territory’s government banned more international routes in response to an increase in Covid-19 cases.

It announced flight bans from eight countries for two weeks, starting on Saturday, affecting all flights from the US, Canada, the UK, France, Australia, the Philippines, Pakistan and India.

And, in a separate announcement, the authorities barred flights from South Korea after three passengers tested positive for the virus on arrival from Seoul.

In less than six weeks, Hong Kong has imposed flight bans on 24 routes. The latest affect the likes of Air Canada, Air India and Philippines AirAsia, but Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific has borne the brunt of these measures.

When the authorities tightened rules and voided quarantine-related exemptions for flight crews late last year, management announced it might be forced to merge passenger and cargo flight schedules, but after further restrictions on 30 December, the airline announced it was suspending all longhaul cargo flights – freighters and passenger aircraft deployed on cargo missions – for seven days.

Director of flight operations Chris Kempis explained that it was impossible to transition overnight to closed loop operations and that management needed time to consider all factors, including hotel availability for quarantined crews.

Cathay has announced the resumption of longhaul freighter flights, but at a seriously throttled-down level.