INTERESTING READS

By 2019 Newsletter week 16

Safety Warning About Drivers Remaining In Vehicle Cabs While Ferries Are At Sea

What is this about? Drivers who remain on the vehicle deck of ferries pose a danger to themselves and can cause delay in emergency response. The UK’s Marine Accident Investigation Branch has published a report.

IN THE MEDIA

By 2019 Newsletter week 16

Five Parliamentarians Write Open Letter To Find Solutions For Moss

Five members of the Parliamentary Committee on Finance, Transport, Environment and Energy have written an open letter to Bastø Fosen. The letter was published on 17 April in Moss-Avis.

The aim is to improve the viability for the city of Moss, by applying some changes to ferries, terminal and roads.

Moss suffers from congestion due to ferry traffic.

They announced several policy goals, the most important being:

  • The ferries have to be full electric and thus emission-free.
  • On some given departures heavy traffic on the ferries must be avoided.
  • The Moss ferry terminal has to be moved closer to the train station.
  • Highway 19, going through Moss, must be tunnelled.

Bastø-Fosen’s State contract expires end of 2026. The politicians ask to speed up the tender process, in order to give the ferry operator enough time to make the proper investments. “By clarifying who has a license in 2027 as early as possible, it will be easier to plan in a longer perspective. We hope for a dialogue on this issue,” say the MP’s.

Bastø Fosen has hybrid ferries on order.

SHORT NEWS

By 2019 Newsletter week 16
  • Construction has commenced of the second of two 118m high-speed trimaran ferries for Fred.Olsen Express. A metal cutting ceremony for the BAÑADEROS EXPRESS was held in the Philippines shipyard, where the official names for the new vessels were officially announced by Fred. Olsen Express. The first will be named BAJAMAR EXPRESS.
  • FRS will have a reshuffle: Chartered GOLDEN BRIDGE will sail between Motril and Mellila. VOLCAN DE TAUCE will sail from Motril to Tanger Med, with passengers. Motril is becoming an important hub for North-Africa.
  • Brittany Ferries’ HONFLEUR will most likely not enter service until 2020.
  • Tirrenia charters Greek ro-pax ARIADNE for Napels-Cagliari.

FERRY SHIPPING

By 2019 Newsletter week 15

Salamis Launches New Weekly Service

After having acquired ro-ro vessel AKRITAS, Salamis Lines have announced the start of a new weekly service. The vessel will serve the ports of Thessaloniki , Limassol and Haifa as from Friday 12 April.

FSG Successfully Launch Seventh Ro-Ro For SIEM

By 2019 Newsletter week 15

On 8 April, the Flensburger-Schiffbau-Gesellschaft’s seventh ro-ro ship for SIEM was successfully launched.

Her name, LEEVSTEN, comes from the Lower German dialect and means “Dearest”.

The Onorato Group charters the two previous SIEM units ALF POLLACK and MARIA GRAZIA ONORATO. Local newspaper Kieler Nachrichte reports that the LEEVSTEN goes to “a Mediterranean company”.

She will be delivered during summer.

Length: 209,79 m / Speed: 21,3 knots / Lane metre: 4,076 / Trailer capacity: 283

Watch a video from the launch

FERRY PORTS

By 2019 Newsletter week 15

Strong Year 2018 For Copenhagen Malmö Port

  • Turnover: SEK 908 million (SEK 839 million).
  • Operating income: SEK 110 million (SEK 78 million)
  • Profit: SEK 46.7 million (26.3 million)
  • CMP handled 15.1 million tonnes of freight compared with 15.5 million tonnes in 2017.
  • Decrease in volumes in the oil sector. Success story mainly due to cruise business.
  • Increase in ro-ro volumes: 298,000 handled units.

FINANCE

By 2019 Newsletter week 15

Baleària Sees Important Growth On North-Africa Routes

+11% passengers: 4,320,000

+17% vehicles: 1,209,000

+5% turnover: €381,400,000

-14% EBITDA: €70,300,000

-37% net profit: €27,400,000

  • 22% of Baleària passengers = foreign market. On these international lines, passenger growth was 26% while sales exceeded 84 million euros (16% more). Half of the group’s passengers (2,277,000) travelled the lines connecting the Iberian Peninsula to northern Africa (Morocco, Algeria, Ceuta and Melilla); thus, northern Africa is the area where the company is growing the most.
  • 50% of business is cargo, with a growth of 3.3% (5,800,000 lane metres of goods carried).
  • Reasons for drop in EBITDA and net profit are the high cost of the implementation of the new routes on the Alboran Sea and around the Canary Islands, along with the increased bunker price.
  • Trend expected to remain steady this financial year while new traffic routes are consolidated and the planned ship engine refittings are completed as they are currently inactive.