(Adds latest from Hapag-Lloyd)
Jan 22 (Reuters) - Iranian-backed Houthi militants in
Yemen have stepped up attacks on vessels in the Red Sea,
impacting a shipping route vital to East-West trade.
In response, some shipping companies have instructed vessels
to instead sail around southern Africa, a slower and therefore
more expensive route.
The U.S. and Britain launched dozens of air strikes against
Houthi military targets overnight on Jan. 11 and 12, widening
regional conflict stemming from Israel's war in Gaza.
Below are actions taken by companies (in alphabetical
order):
C.H. ROBINSON CHRW.O
The global logistics group said on Dec. 22 it had rerouted
more than 25 vessels around Africa over the previous week, and
that number would likely grow.
"Blank sailings and rate increases are expected to continue
across many trades into Q1 of 2024," it added.
CMA CGM
The French shipping firm said on Jan. 5 it had not changed
its plans announced in December to gradually raise the number of
vessels transiting through the Suez Canal.
It had previously rerouted several vessels via the Cape of
Good Hope.
EURONAV EUAV.BR
The Belgian oil tanker firm said on Dec. 18 it would avoid
the Red Sea until further notice.
EVERGREEN 2603.TW
The Taiwanese container shipping line said on Dec. 18 its
vessels on regional services to Red Sea ports would sail to safe
waters nearby, while ships scheduled to pass through the Red Sea
would be rerouted around Africa. It also temporarily stopped
accepting Israeli cargo.
FRONTLINE FRO.OL
The Norway-based oil tanker group on Dec. 18 said its
vessels would avoid the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.
GRAM CAR CARRIERS GCC.OL
The Norwegian auto carrier said on Dec. 21 its vessels were
restricted from passing through the Red Sea.
HAFNIA HAFNI.OL
The Norwegian shipping firm said on Jan. 12 it has halted
all ships heading towards or within the Bab al-Mandab Strait.
HAPAG-LLOYD HLAG.DE
The German container shipping line said on Jan. 22 it will
continue to route its vessels around Africa until further
notice.
The company also said it is introducing land corridors
from Jebel Ali, Dammam and Jubail to its ocean shuttle service
out of Jeddah to mitigate the impact on its business.
HMM 011200.KS
The South Korean container shipper said on Dec. 19 it had
ordered its ships which would normally use the Suez Canal to
reroute around Africa.
HOEGH AUTOLINERS HAUTO.OL
The Norwegian auto carrier said on Dec. 20 it would stop
sailing via the Red Sea.
KLAVENESS COMBINATION CARRIERS KCCK.OL
The Norway-based fleet operator said on Dec. 28 it was
unlikely to sail any of its vessels in the Red Sea unless the
situation improves.
KUEHNE + NAGEL KNIN.S
"Even if from today forward the Bab al-Mandeb Strait was to
become safe and secure for transit, we expect it will take a
minimum of two months before vessels could assume normal
rotational patterns," Michael Aldwell, executive VP for sea
logistics at the Swiss logistics firm, said on Jan. 12.
MAERSK MAERSKb.CO
The Danish shipping group on Jan. 5 suspended Red Sea
traffic "for the foreseeable future".
On Jan. 18, Maersk said the Red Sea disruptions and winter
weather were causing congestion at container terminals, urging
customers to pick up their units as soon as possible. It also
started offering customers the option to shift some cargo from
vessels to air freight at ports in Oman and the UAE.
A day earlier, its CEO said the Red Sea-related disruption
to global shipping would likely last at least a few months.
Maersk said after the U.S.-British air strikes that it hopes
international interventions and a larger naval presence in the
area will eventually lead to a resumption of maritime commerce
through the strait.
On Jan. 16, it sent two container ships through the Red Sea
carrying goods for the U.S. military and government.
MSC
Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) said on Dec. 16 its
ships would not transit through the Suez Canal.
NIPPON YUSEN 9101.T
Japan's biggest shipper by sales suspended navigation
through the Red Sea for all vessels it operates, a spokesperson
told Reuters on Jan. 16. It has also instructed vessels near the
Red Sea to wait in safe waters and is considering route change.
OCEAN NETWORK EXPRESS
Ocean Network Express, a joint venture between Japan's
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha 9107.T , Mitsui O.S.K. Lines 9104.T and
Nippon Yusen, said on Dec. 19 it would reroute vessels from the
Red Sea to the Cape of Good Hope or temporarily pause journeys
and move to safe areas.
OOCL
The Hong Kong-headquartered container group said on Dec. 21
it had instructed its vessels to either divert their route away
from the Red Sea or suspend sailing. It also stopped accepting
cargo to and from Israel until further notice.
TORM TRMDa.CO
The Danish oil tanker group said on Jan. 12 it had decided
to pause all transits through the southern Red Sea for now.
WALLENIUS WILHELMSEN WAWI.OL
The Norwegian shipping group said on Dec. 19 it would halt
Red Sea transits until further notice.
YANG MING MARINE TRANSPORT 2609.TW
The Taiwanese container shipping company said on Dec. 18 it
would divert ships sailing through the Red Sea and the Gulf of
Aden via the Cape of Good Hope for the next two weeks.
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Type of goods shipped via the Suez route https://tmsnrt.rs/3NBsrTC
Vessels re-routing around Africa https://tmsnrt.rs/3NVTcCz
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(Compiled by Paolo Laudani, Izabela Niemiec, Jesus Calero,
Louis van Boxel-Woolf, Tristan Veyet and Elsa Ohlen in Gdansk;
Editing by Jason Neely, Milla Nissi and Louise Heavens)
((Paolo.Laudani@thomsonreuters.com;))