Thu 20 Sep 2018, 00:02 GMT

Freight association slams 'yet another surcharge' by box carriers


Launches stinging attack, describing sulphur surcharge as 'unjustified and blatant profiteering'.


Image credit: Pixabay
The British International Freight Association (BIFA) - the trade association for UK freight forwarding and logistics companies - has described the introduction of a so-called "sulphur surcharge" within the container shipping industry as "unjustified and blatant profiteering".

It follows this week's announcement by Maersk that it will be changing the way in which its Bunker Adjustment Factor (BAF) tariff is calculated from January 2019 - one year ahead of the introduction of the 0.5 percent global cap on fuel sulphur content that is set to result in higher bunker costs for buyers switching from high-sulphur to 2020-compliant fuels.

In a statement, BIFA said Maersk's new BAF rates "could lead to prices of a 40 ft container on the Far East to North Europe route being hiked by anywhere between USD 480 to USD 840 (depending on fuel price), or by up to USD 683 (depending on fuel price) from the Far East to US West Coast."

Robert Keen, BIFA Director General, remarked: "By any measure, these are very major increases, and they will be received negatively by BIFA members' customers.

"While the shipping operators may say that the new BAFs are needed to cover the cost of switching to low sulphur fuels or fitting exhaust 'scrubbers', rises of this magnitude are unjustified and could be construed as blatant profiteering by shipping lines determined to exploit the situation."

BIFA also explained that it would prefer any rate increases to be consolidated within freight rates and with any required fluctuation being managed against that figure.

'Yet another surcharge'

"BIFA members are now faced with the task of explaining yet another surcharge to their customers, and what the rationale behind it is. The sulphur surcharge is bound to be extremely unpopular," Keen said.

The UK trade association pointed out that, earlier this year, a number of container shippers - including CMA CGM, Hapag-Lloyd and Maersk - already announced that they would be introducing 'emergency surcharges' in response to rising bunker costs.

BIFA also argued that shipping lines have previously attempted to raise rates by including surcharges for equipment imbalance, peak season and currency, along with other fuel surcharges.

"The latest swingeing increase is only the latest in a series of surcharges imposed by the shipping lines, and BIFA has long campaigned against them," BIFA declared.

"Forwarders do not like shipping line surcharges - we have been challenging, and will continue to challenge their legitimacy on behalf of our members - and their customers," Keen added.


Areion vessel. Dorian LPG takes delivery of dual-fuel VLGC capable of carrying ammonia  

The 93,000-cbm Areion can run on LPG or fuel oil and transport ammonia cargoes.

FSRU Toscana alongside Green Zeebrugge vessel. RINA awards ISCC EU certification to OLT Offshore LNG Toscana for bio-LNG supply  

Certification enables bio-LNG use in the EU as a renewable fuel under RED II and RED III directives.

World Shipping Council at IMO meeting. WSC calls for safe maritime corridor as 20,000 seafarers remain trapped in the Persian Gulf  

Industry body urges IMO member states to establish safe passage and supply access.

Graphic promoting Auramarine webinar titled 'Sustainable Fueling Part 3: Ammonia - next alternative fuel in marine'. Auramarine to host webinar on ammonia as marine fuel in April  

Finnish firm will explore ammonia’s role in maritime decarbonisation at its third spring webinar.

Front cover of study by WinGD and Envision Energy titled 'Renewable Fuel Economics: An OPEX illustration based on current costs'. Green ammonia could reach cost parity with VLSFO and LNG by 2050, study finds  

WinGD and Envision Energy study projects green ammonia operational costs competitive with conventional marine fuels.

Elenger Marine's LNG bunkering vessel Optimus alongside Brittany Ferries’ Saint-Malo. Bureau Veritas verifies methane emissions on Brittany Ferries’ LNG vessels  

Verification enables ferry operator to report measured methane slip instead of regulatory default values.

Map showing existing and planned Emission Control Areas (ECAs). Alliance calls for urgent black carbon action as new Arctic emission control areas take effect  

Canadian Arctic and Norwegian Sea ECAs now in force, with compliance deadline set for March 2027.

Artistic impression of battery-electric ferry for operation on Perth’s Swan River. Lloyd’s Register to class Western Australia’s first electric ferry fleet  

Echo Marine Group partners with Lloyd’s Register on five battery-electric ferries for Perth’s Swan River.

Thomas Kazakos, secretary general of The International Chamber of Shipping (ICS). ICS condemns Middle East shipping attacks as 20,000 seafarers remain trapped  

Industry body calls for urgent state action to resupply vessels and enable crew changes.

Molslinjen ferry illustration. Molslinjen order propels Australia to top of battery vessel production rankings  

Danish ferry operator’s three-catamaran order at Incat Tasmania shifts global manufacturing landscape, analysis shows.