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Container ship

A container ship (also called boxship or spelled containership) is a cargo ship that carries all of its load in truck-size intermodal containers, in a technique called containerization. Container ships are a common means of commercial intermodal freight transport and now carry most seagoing non-bulk cargo.

Two Maersk Line container ships.
Class overview
NameContainer ship
Subclasses
  • (1) Geared or gearless (as per cargo-handling type)
  • (2) Freighter or pure container (as per passenger carrier-type)
  • (3) Feeder or world-wide foreign-going vessel (as per trade)
  • (4) Panamax or post-Panamax vessel (as per breadth of vessel < or > than 32.2m respectively)
Built1956–present
In service9,535 ships as of 2010[1]
General characteristics
PropulsionTypically diesel since 1990[2]
SpeedTypically 16–25 knots (30–46 km/h) (19-29 MPH)[2]
CapacityUp to 24,000 TEU
NotesReduced superstructure, containers stacked on deck, bulbous bow

Container ship capacity is measured in twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU). Typical loads are a mix of 20-foot (1-TEU) and 40-foot (2-TEU) ISO-standard containers, with the latter predominant.

Today, about 90% of non-bulk cargo worldwide is transported by container ships, and the largest modern container ships can carry up to 24,000 TEU (e.g., Ever Ace). Container ships now rival crude oil tankers and bulk carriers as the largest commercial seaborne vessels.

History

 
Container ships avoid the complex stevedoring of break-bulk shipping
 
The earliest container ships were converted T2 tankers in the 1940s after World War II
 
Container ship Tan Cang 15 on the Saigon River in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
 
A Delmas container ship unloading at the Zanzibar port in Tanzania
 
Container feeder Helga arriving at Greenock
 
Open-top containership Rhoneborg at Fremantle

There are two main types of dry cargo: bulk cargo and break bulk cargo. Bulk cargoes, like grain or coal, are transported unpackaged in the hull of the ship, generally in large volume.[3] Break-bulk cargoes, on the other hand, are transported in packages, and are generally manufactured goods.[4] Before the advent of containerization in the 1950s, break-bulk items were loaded, lashed, unlashed and unloaded from the ship one piece at a time. However, by grouping cargo into containers, 1,000 to 3,000 cubic feet (28 to 85 m3) of cargo, or up to about 64,000 pounds (29,000 kg), is moved at once and each container is secured to the ship once in a standardized way.[5] Containerization has increased the efficiency of moving traditional break-bulk cargoes significantly, reducing shipping time by 84% and costs by 35%.[6] In 2001, more than 90% of world trade in non-bulk goods was transported in ISO containers.[7] In 2009, almost one quarter of the world's dry cargo was shipped by container, an estimated 125 million TEU or 1.19 billion tonnes worth of cargo.[8]

The first ships designed to carry standardized load units were used in the late 18th century in England. In 1766 James Brindley designed the box boat "Starvationer" with 10 wooden containers, to transport coal from Worsley Delph to Manchester via the Bridgewater Canal.[9] Before the Second World War, the first container ships were used to carry the baggage of the luxury passenger train from London to Paris (Southern Railway's Golden Arrow / La Flèche d'Or). These containers were loaded in London or Paris, and carried to ports of Dover or Calais on flat cars.[10] In February 1931, the first container ship in the world was launched; the Autocarrier, owned by Southern Railway UK. It had 21 slots for containers of Southern Railway.[9][11]

The earliest container ships after the Second World War were converted oil tankers, built up from surplus T2 tankers after World War II. In 1951, the first purpose-built container vessels began operating in Denmark, and between Seattle and Alaska. The first commercially successful container ship was Ideal X,[12] a T2 tanker, owned by Malcom McLean, which carried 58 metal containers between Newark, New Jersey and Houston, Texas, on its first voyage.[13] In 1955, McLean built his company, McLean Trucking into one of the United States' biggest freighter fleets. In 1955, he purchased the small Pan Atlantic Steamship Company from Waterman Steamship and adapted its ships to carry cargo in large uniform metal containers.[14] On April 26, 1956, the first of these rebuilt container vessels, Ideal X, left the Port Newark in New Jersey and a new revolution in modern shipping resulted.[15][16]

MV Kooringa was the world's first fully cellular purpose-built container ship and was built by Australian company, Associated Steamships Pty. Ltd. in partnership with McIlwraith, McEacharn & Co and commissioned in May 1964.

Container vessels eliminate the individual hatches, holds and dividers of the traditional general cargo vessels. The hull of a typical container ship is a huge warehouse divided into cells by vertical guide rails. These cells are designed to hold cargo in pre-packed units – containers. Shipping containers are usually made of steel, but other materials like aluminum, fiberglass or plywood are also used. They are designed to be entirely transferred to and from smaller coastal carriers, trains, trucks or semi-trailers (and so are carried by different modes of transport during one voyage, thus giving the name intermodal transport). There are several types of containers and they are categorized according to their size and functions.

Today, about 90% of non-bulk cargo worldwide is transported by container, and modern container ships can carry over 24,000 TEU. As a class, container ships now rival crude oil tankers and bulk carriers as the largest commercial vessels on the ocean.

Although containerization caused a revolution in the world of shipping, its introduction was not easy. Ports, railway (railroad in the US) companies, and shippers were concerned about the huge costs of developing the ports and railway infrastructure needed to handle container ships, and for the movement of containers on land by rail and road. Trade unions were concerned about massive job loss among port and dock workers at ports, as containers were sure to eliminate several manual jobs of cargo handling. It took ten years of legal battles before container ships would be pressed into international service. In 1966, a container liner service from the US to the Dutch city of Rotterdam commenced. Containerization changed not only the face of shipping, but it also revolutionized world trade. A container ship can be loaded and unloaded in a few hours compared to days in a traditional cargo vessel. This, besides cutting labor costs, has greatly reduced shipping times between ports; for example, it takes a few weeks instead of months for a consignment to be delivered from India to Europe and vice versa. It has resulted in less breakage due to less handling; also, there is less danger of cargo shifting during a voyage. As containers are sealed and only opened at the destination, theft has been greatly reduced.

Containerization has lowered shipping expense and decreased shipping time, and this has in turn helped the growth of international trade. Cargo that once arrived in cartons, crates, bales, barrels or bags now comes in factory sealed containers, with no indication to the human eye of their contents, except for a product code that machines can scan and computers trace. This system of tracking has been so exact that a two-week voyage can be timed for arrival with an accuracy of under fifteen minutes. It has resulted in such revolutions as on time guaranteed delivery and just in time manufacturing. Raw materials arrive from factories in sealed containers less than an hour before they are required in manufacture, resulting in reduced inventory expense.

Exporters load merchandise in boxes that are provided by the shipping companies. They are then delivered to the docks by road, rail or a combination of both for loading onto container ships. Prior to containerization, huge gangs of men would spend hours fitting various items of cargo into different holds. Today, cranes, installed either on the pier or on the ship, are used to place containers on board the ship. When the hull has been fully loaded, additional containers are stacked on the deck.

Today's largest container ships measure 400 metres (1,300 ft) in length.[17] They carry loads equal to the cargo-carrying capacity of sixteen to seventeen pre-World War II freighter ships.

Architecture

There are several key points in the design of modern container ships. The hull, similar to that of bulk carriers and general cargo ships, is built around a strong keel.[18] Into this frame is set one or more below-deck cargo holds, numerous tanks, and the engine room. The holds are topped by hatch covers, onto which more containers can be stacked. Many container ships have cargo cranes installed on them, and some have specialized systems for securing containers on board.

The hull of a modern cargo ship is a complex arrangement of steel plates and strengthening beams. Resembling ribs, and fastened at right angles to the keel, are the ship's frames.[18] The ship's main deck, the metal platework that covers the top of the hull framework, is supported by beams that are attached to the tops of the frames and run the full breadth of the ship.[18] The beams not only support the deck, but along with the deck, frames, and transverse bulkheads, strengthen and reinforce the shell.[18] Another feature of recent hulls is a set of double-bottom tanks, which provide a second watertight shell that runs most of the length of a ship.[19] The double-bottoms generally hold liquids such as fuel oil, ballast water or fresh water.[19]

A ship's engine room houses its main engines and auxiliary machinery such as the fresh water and sewage systems, electrical generators, fire pumps, and air conditioners.[19] In most new ships, the engine room is located in the aft portion.[19]

Size categories

Container ships are distinguished into 7 major size categories: small feeder, feeder, feedermax, Panamax, Post-Panamax, New Panamax and ultra-large.[20] As of December 2012, there were 161 container ships in the VLCS class (Very Large Container Ships, more than 10,000 TEU), and 51 ports in the world can accommodate them.[21]

The size of a Panamax vessel is limited by the original Panama canal's lock chambers, which can accommodate ships with a beam of up to 32.31 m, a length overall of up to 294.13 m, and a draft of up to 12.04 m.[22] The Post-Panamax category has historically been used to describe ships with a moulded breadth over 32.31 m,[23] however the Panama Canal expansion project has caused some changes in terminology. The New Panamax category is based on the maximum vessel-size that is able to transit a new third set of locks, which opened in June 2016.[24][25] The third set of locks were built to accommodate a container ship with a length overall of 366 metres (1,201 ft), a maximum width of 49 metres (161 ft), and tropical fresh-water draft of 15.2 metres (50 ft).[25][26] Such a vessel, called New Panamax class, is wide enough to carry 19 columns of containers, can have a total capacity of approximately 12,000 TEU and is comparable in size to a capesize bulk carrier or a Suezmax tanker.[26]

Container ships under 3,000 TEU are generally called feeder ships or feeders. They are small ships that typically operate between smaller container ports. Some feeders collect their cargo from small ports, drop it off at large ports for transshipment on larger ships, and distribute containers from the large port to smaller regional ports.[2] This size of vessel is the most likely to carry cargo cranes on board.[27]

Container ship size categories
Name Capacity
(TEU)[20]
Length Beam Draft Example
Ultra Large Container Vessel (ULCV) 14,501 and higher 1,200 ft (366 m) and longer 160.7 ft (49 m) and wider 49.9 ft (15.2 m) and deeper With a length of 400 m, a width of 59 m, draft of 14.5 m, and a capacity of 18,270 TEU, ships of the Maersk Triple E class are able to transit the Suez canal.[28] (photo: MV Mærsk Mc-Kinney Møller)  
New Panamax (or Neopanamax) 10,000–14,500 1,200 ft (366 m) 160.7 ft (49 m) 49.9 ft (15.2 m) With a beam of 43 m, ships of the COSCO Guangzhou class are much too big to fit through the Panama Canal's old locks, but could easily fit through the new expansion. (photo: The 9,500 TEU MV COSCO Guangzhou pierside in Hamburg)  
Post-Panamax 5,101–10,000
Panamax 3,001–5,100 965 ft (294.13 m) 106 ft (32.31 m) 39.5 ft (12.04 m) Ships of the Bay class are at the upper limit of the Panamax class, with an overall length of 292.15 m, beam of 32.2m, and maximum depth of 13.3 m.[29] (photo: The 4,224 TEU MV Providence Bay passing through the Panama Canal)  
Feedermax 2,001–3,000 Container ships under 3,000 TEU are typically called feeders. In some areas of the world, they might be outfitted with cargo cranes. (photo: The 384 TEU MV TransAtlantic at anchor[30])  
Feeder 1,001–2,000
Small feeder Up to 1,000

Cargo cranes

 
Cargo cranes on a US navy container ship

A major characteristic of a container ship is whether it has cranes installed for handling its cargo. Those that have cargo cranes are called geared and those that don't are called ungeared or gearless. The earliest purpose-built container ships in the 1970s were all gearless.[27] Since then, the percentage of geared newbuilds has fluctuated widely, but has been decreasing overall, with only 7.5% of the container ship capacity in 2009 being equipped with cranes.[27]

While geared container ships are more flexible in that they can visit ports that are not equipped with pierside container cranes, they suffer from several drawbacks.[27] To begin with, geared ships will cost more to purchase than a gearless ship.[27] Geared ships also incur greater recurring expenses, such as maintenance and fuel costs.[27] The United Nations Council on Trade and Development characterizes geared ships as a "niche market only appropriate for those ports where low cargo volumes do not justify investment in port cranes or where the public sector does not have the financial resources for such investment".[27]

Instead of the rotary cranes, some geared ships have gantry cranes installed.[31] These cranes, specialized for container work, are able to roll forward and aft on rails.[31] In addition to the additional capital expense and maintenance costs, these cranes generally load and discharge containers much more slowly than their shoreside counterparts.[31]

The introduction and improvement of shoreside container cranes have been a key to the success of the container ship.[31] The first crane that was specifically designed for container work was built in California's Port of Alameda in 1959.[31] By the 1980s, shoreside gantry cranes were capable of moving containers on a 3-minute-cycle, or up to 400 tons per hour.[31] In March 2010, at Port Klang in Malaysia, a new world record was set when 734 container moves were made in a single hour.[32] The record was achieved using 9 cranes to simultaneously load and unload MV CSCL Pusan, a ship with a capacity of 9,600 TEU.[32]

Vessels in the 1,500–2,499 TEU range are the most likely size class to have cranes, with more than 60% of this category being geared ships.[27] Slightly less than a third of the very smallest ships (from 100–499 TEU) are geared, and almost no ships with a capacity of over 4,000 TEU are geared.[27]

 
A view into the holds of a container ship. The vertical cell guides organize containers athwartships.

Cargo holds

Efficiency has always been key in the design of container ships.[33] While containers may be carried on conventional break-bulk ships, cargo holds for dedicated container ships are specially constructed to speed loading and unloading, and to efficiently keep containers secure while at sea.[33] A key aspect of container ship specialization is the design of the hatches, the openings from the main deck to the cargo holds.[34] The hatch openings stretch the entire breadth of the cargo holds, and are surrounded by a raised steel structure known as the hatch coaming.[33][34] On top of the hatch coamings are the hatch covers. Until the 1950s, hatches were typically secured with wooden boards and tarpaulins held down with battens.[35] Today, some hatch covers can be solid metal plates that are lifted on and off the ship by cranes, while others are articulated mechanisms that are opened and closed using powerful hydraulic rams.

Another key component of dedicated container-ship design is the use of cell guides.[33] Cell guides are strong vertical structures constructed of metal installed into a ship's cargo holds.[33] These structures guide containers into well-defined rows during loading and provide some support for containers against the ship's rolling at sea.[33] So fundamental to container ship design are cell guides that organizations such as the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development use their presence to distinguish dedicated container ships from general break-bulk cargo ships.[23]

A system of three dimensions is used in cargo plans to describe the position of a container aboard the ship.[36] The first coordinate is the bay, which starts at the front of the ship and increases aft.[36] The second coordinate is the row.[36] Rows on the starboard side are given odd numbers and those on the port side are given even numbers.[36] The rows nearest the centerline are given low numbers, and the numbers increase for slots further from the centerline.[36] The third coordinate is the tier, with the first tier at the bottom of the cargo holds, the second tier on top of that, and so forth.[36]

Container ships only take 20 foot, 40 foot, and 45 foot containers. 45 footers only fit above deck. 40 foot containers are the primary container size, making up about 90% of all container shipping and since container shipping moves 90% of the world's freight, over 80% of the world's freight moves via 40 foot containers.

Lashing systems

 
Twist-locks and lashing rods (pictured) are widely used to secure containers aboard ships.

Numerous systems are used to secure containers aboard ships, depending on factors such as the type of ship, the type of container, and the location of the container.[37][38] Stowage inside the holds of fully cellular (FC) ships is simplest, typically using simple metal forms called container guides, locating cones, and anti-rack spacers to lock the containers together.[39] Above-decks, without the extra support of the cell guides, more complicated equipment is used.[37] Three types of systems are currently in wide use: lashing systems, locking systems, and buttress systems.[37] Lashing systems secure containers to the ship using devices made from wire rope, rigid rods, or chains and devices to tension the lashings, such as turnbuckles.[37] The effectiveness of lashings is increased by securing containers to each other, either by simple metal forms (such as stacking cones) or more complicated devices such as twist-lock stackers.[37] A typical twist-lock is inserted into the casting hole of one container and rotated to hold it in place, then another container is lowered on top of it.[40] The two containers are locked together by twisting the device's handle.[40] A typical twist-lock is constructed of forged steel and ductile iron and has a shear strength of 48 tonnes.[41]

The buttress system, used on some large container ships, uses a system of large towers attached to the ship at both ends of each cargo hold.[42] As the ship is loaded, a rigid, removable stacking frame is added, structurally securing each tier of containers together.[42]

Bridge

Container ships have typically had a single bridge and accommodation unit towards the rear, but to reconcile demand for larger container capacity with SOLAS visibility requirements, several new designs have been developed. As of 2015, some large container ships are being developed with the bridge further forward, separate from the exhaust stack. Some smaller container ships working in European ports and rivers have liftable wheelhouses, which can be lowered to pass under low bridges.

Fleet characteristics

Largest container ship operators, 2022[43]
  1. MSC – Switzerland / Italy
  2. Maersk Line – Denmark
  3. CMA CGM – France
  4. COSCO – China
  5. Hapag-Lloyd – Germany
  6. ONE – Japan
  7. Evergreen – Taiwan
  8. HMM – South Korea
  9. Yang Ming – Taiwan
  10. ZIM – Israel
Fleet capacity, April 14, 2022[44]
fleet TEU
MSC
4339852
Maersk
4245962
CMA CGM
3261052
COSCO
2927413
Hapag-Lloyd
1742598
ONE
1515708
Evergreen
1504564
HMM
820320
Yang Ming
666164
ZIM
463277
Worldwide capacity[45][46]
year million TEU
1990
1.5
2000
4.3
2008
10.6
2012
15.4
2017
20.3

As of 2010, container ships made up 13.3% of the world's fleet in terms of deadweight tonnage.[47] The world's total of container ship deadweight tonnage has increased from 11 million DWT in 1980 to 169.0 million DWT in 2010.[48] The combined deadweight tonnage of container ships and general cargo ships, which also often carry containers, represents 21.8% of the world's fleet.[49]

As of 2009, the average age of container ships worldwide was 10.6 years, making them the youngest general vessel type, followed by bulk carriers at 16.6 years, oil tankers at 17 years, general cargo ships at 24.6 years, and others at 25.3 years.[50]

Most of the world's carrying capacity in fully cellular container ships is in the liner service, where ships trade on scheduled routes.[27][51] As of January 2010, the top 20 liner companies controlled 67.5% of the world's fully cellular container capacity, with 2,673 vessels of an average capacity of 3,774 TEU.[1] The remaining 6,862 fully cellular ships have an average capacity of 709 TEU each.[1]

The vast majority of the capacity of fully cellular container ships used in the liner trade is owned by German shipowners, with approximately 75% owned by Hamburg brokers.[51] It is a common practice for the large container lines to supplement their own ships with chartered-in ships, for example in 2009, 48.9% of the tonnage of the top 20 liner companies was chartered-in in this manner.[51]

Flag states

International law requires that every merchant ship be registered in a country, called its flag state.[52] A ship's flag state exercises regulatory control over the vessel and is required to inspect it regularly, certify the ship's equipment and crew, and issue safety and pollution prevention documents. As of 2006, the United States Bureau of Transportation Statistics count 2,837 container ships of 10,000 long tons deadweight (DWT) or greater worldwide.[53] Panama was the world's largest flag state for container ships, with 541 of the vessels in its registry.[53] Seven other flag states had more than 100 registered container ships: Liberia (415), Germany (248), Singapore (177), Cyprus (139), the Marshall Islands (118) and the United Kingdom (104).[53] The Panamanian, Liberian, and Marshallese flags are open registries and considered by the International Transport Workers' Federation to be flags of convenience.[54] By way of comparison, traditional maritime nations such as the United States and Japan only had 75 and 11 registered container ships, respectively.[53]

Vessel purchases

 

In recent years, oversupply of container ship capacity has caused prices for new and used ships to fall. From 2008 to 2009, new container ship prices dropped by 19–33%, while prices for 10-year-old container ships dropped by 47–69%.[55] In March 2010, the average price for a geared 500-TEU container ship was $10 million, while gearless ships of 6,500 and 12,000 TEU averaged prices of $74 million and $105 million respectively.[56] At the same time, secondhand prices for 10-year-old geared container ships of 500-, 2,500-, and 3,500-TEU capacity averaged prices of $4 million, $15 million, and $18 million respectively.[57]

In 2009, 11,669,000 gross tons of newly built container ships were delivered.[58] Over 85% of this new capacity was built in the Republic of Korea, China, and Japan, with Korea accounting for over 57% of the world's total alone.[58] New container ships accounted for 15% of the total new tonnage that year, behind bulk carriers at 28.9% and oil tankers at 22.6%.[58]

Scrapping

Most ships are removed from the fleet through a process known as scrapping.[59] Scrapping is rare for ships under 18 years old and common for those over 40 years in age.[60] Ship-owners and buyers negotiate scrap prices based on factors such as the ship's empty weight (called light ton displacement or LTD) and prices in the scrap metal market.[61] Scrapping rates are volatile, the price per light ton displacement has swung from a high of $650 per LTD in mid-2008 to $200 per LTD in early 2009, before building to $400 per LTD in March 2010.[62] As of 2009, over 96% of the world's scrapping activity takes place in China, India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan.[63]

The global economic downturn of 2008–2009 resulted in more ships than usual being sold for scrap.[62] In 2009, 364,300 TEU worth of container ship capacity was scrapped, up from 99,900 TEU in 2008.[62] Container ships accounted for 22.6% of the total gross tonnage of ships scrapped that year.[64] Despite the surge, the capacity removed from the fleet only accounted for 3% of the world's container ship capacity.[62] The average age of container ships scrapped in 2009 was 27.0 years.[64]

Largest ships

15 largest container ship classes, listed by TEU capacity
Built Name Class
size
Maximum TEU Sources
2021 Ever Ace 6 23,992
2020 HMM Algeciras 7 23,964
2020 HMM Oslo 5 23,820
2019 MSC Gülsün 6 23,756
2019 MSC Mina 10 23,656
2020 CMA CGM Jacques Saadé 9 23,112
2017 OOCL Hong Kong 6 21,413 [65]
2018 COSCO Shipping Universe 6 21,237 [66]
2018 CMA CGM Antoine de Saint Exupery 3 20,954 [67]
2017 Madrid Mærsk 11 20,568 [68]
2017 MOL Truth 2 20,182 [69]
2017 MOL Triumph 4 20,170 [70]
2019 Ever Glory 4 20,160
2018 Ever Goods 7 20,124
2018 COSCO Shipping Taurus 5 20,119

Economies of scale have dictated an upward trend in the size of container ships in order to reduce expenses. However, there are certain limitations to the size of container ships. Primarily, these are the availability of sufficiently large main engines and the availability of a sufficient number of ports and terminals prepared and equipped to handle ultra-large container ships. Furthermore, the permissible maximum ship dimensions in some of the world's main waterways could present an upper limit in terms of vessel growth. This primarily concerns the Suez Canal and the Singapore Strait.

In 2008 the South Korean shipbuilder STX announced plans to construct a container ship capable of carrying 22,000 TEU,[71] and with a proposed length of 450 m (1,480 ft) and a beam of 60 m (200 ft).[72] If constructed, the container ship would become the largest seagoing vessel in the world.[73]

Since even very large container ships are vessels with relatively low draft compared to large tankers and bulk carriers, there is still considerable room for vessel growth. Compared to today's largest container ships, Maersk Line's 15,200 TEU Emma Mærsk-type series, a 20,000 TEU container ship would only be moderately larger in terms of exterior dimensions. According to a 2011 estimate, an ultra-large container ship of 20,250 TEU would measure 440 m × 59 m (1,444 ft × 194 ft), compared to 397.71 m × 56.40 m (1,304.8 ft × 185.0 ft) for the Emma Mærsk class.[74][75] It would have an estimated deadweight of circa 220,000 tons. While such a vessel might be near the upper limit for a Suez Canal passage, the so-called Malaccamax concept (for Straits of Malacca) does not apply for container ships, since the Malacca and Singapore Straits' draft limit of about 21 metres (69 ft) is still above that of any conceivable container ship design. In 2011, Maersk announced plans to build a new "Triple E" family of container ships with a capacity of 18,000 TEU, with an emphasis on lower fuel consumption.[76]

 
Ever Given in March 2020 at the ECT Delta terminal in the Port of Rotterdam

In the present market situation, main engines will not be as much of a limiting factor for vessel growth either. The steadily rising expense of fuel oil in the early 2010s had prompted most container lines to adapt a slower, more economical voyage speed of about 21 knots, compared to earlier top speeds of 25 or more knots. Subsequently, newly built container ships can be fitted with a smaller main engine. Engine types fitted to today's ships of 14,000 TEU are thus sufficiently large to propel future vessels of 20,000 TEU or more. Maersk Line, the world's largest container shipping line, nevertheless opted for twin engines (two smaller engines working two separate propellers), when ordering a series of ten 18,000 TEU vessels from Daewoo Shipbuilding in February 2011.[77] The ships were delivered between 2013 and 2014. In 2016, some experts believed that the current largest container ships are at the optimum size, and could not economically be larger, as port facilities would be too expensive, port handling too time consuming, the number of suitable ports too low, and insurance cost too high.[78][79]

In March 2017 the first ship with an official capacity over 20,000 TEUs was christened at Samsung Heavy Industries. MOL Triumph has a capacity of 20,150 TEUs. Samsung Heavy Industries was expected to deliver several ships of over 20,000 TEUs in 2017, and has orders for at least ten vessels in that size range for OOCL and MOL.[70]

Freight market

The act of hiring a ship to carry cargo is called chartering. Outside special bulk cargo markets, ships are hired by three types of charter agreements: the voyage charter, the time charter, and the bareboat charter.[80] In a voyage charter, the charterer rents the vessel from the loading port to the discharge port.[81] In a time charter, the vessel is hired for a set period of time, to perform voyages as the charterer directs.[81] In a bareboat charter, the charterer acts as the ship's operator and manager, taking on responsibilities such as providing the crew and maintaining the vessel.[82] The completed chartering contract is known as a charter party.[83]

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development [UNCTAD], tracks in its 2010 Review of Maritime Trade two aspects of container shipping prices:[84] The first one is a chartering price, specifically the price to time-charter a 1 TEU slot for 14 tonnes of cargo on a container ship.[51] The other is the freight rate; or comprehensive daily cost to deliver one-TEU worth of cargo on a given route.[51][85] As a result of the late-2000s recession, both indicators showed sharp drops during 2008–2009, and have shown signs of stabilization since 2010.

UNCTAD uses the Hamburg Shipbrokers’ Association (formally the Vereinigung Hamburger Schiffsmakler und Schiffsagenten e. V. or VHSS for short) as its main industry source for container ship freight prices.[51] The VHSS maintains a few indices of container ship charter prices. The oldest, which dates back to 1998, is called the Hamburg Index.[51] This index considers time-charters on fully cellular container ships controlled by Hamburg brokers.[51] It is limited to charters of 3 months or more, and presented as the average daily cost in U.S. dollars for a one-TEU slot with a weight of 14 tonnes.[51] The Hamburg Index data is divided into ten categories based primarily on vessel carrying capacity.[51] Two additional categories exist for small vessels of under 500 TEU that carry their own cargo cranes.[51] In 2007, VHSS started another index, the New ConTex which tracks similar data obtained from an international group of shipbrokers.[51]

The Hamburg Index shows some clear trends in recent chartering markets. First, rates were generally increasing from 2000 to 2005. From 2005 to 2008, rates slowly decreased, and in mid-2008 began a "dramatic decline" of approximately 75%, which lasted until rates stabilized in April 2009.[51] Rates have ranged from $2.70 to $35.40 in this period, with prices generally lower on larger ships. The most resilient sized vessel in this time period were those from 200 to 300 TEU, a fact that the United Nations Council on Trade and Development attributes to lack of competition in this sector.[51] Overall, in 2010, these rates rebounded somewhat, but remained at approximately half of their 2008 values.[51] As of 2011, the index shows signs of recovery for container shipping, and combined with increases in global capacity, indicates a positive outlook for the sector in the near future.[51]

2008–2009 freight rates in 1000 US$/TEU[86]
From To 2008 2009
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
Asia U.S. 1.8 1.8 1.9 1.9 1.7 1.4 1.2 1.3
U.S. Asia 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.2 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.9
Europe Asia 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.1 0.9 0.7 0.8 0.9
Asia Europe 2.0 1.9 1.8 1.6 1.0 0.9 1.0 1.4
U.S. Europe 1.3 1.4 1.6 1.7 1.5 1.4 1.4 1.5
Europe U.S. 1.6 1.6 1.6 1.6 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.3
 
Year-average daily charter rates for a 1-TEU (14-tonne) slot have varied from $2.70 to $35.40 between 2000 and 2010.

UNCTAD also tracks container freight rates. Freight rates are expressed as the total price in U.S. dollars for a shipper to transport one TEU worth of cargo along a given route.[51] Data is given for the three main container liner routes: U.S.-Asia, U.S.-Europe, and Europe-Asia.[51] Prices are typically different between the two legs of a voyage, for example the Asia-U.S. rates have been significantly higher than the return U.S.-Asia rates in recent years.[51] Generally, from the fourth quarter of 2008 through the third quarter of 2009, both the volume of container cargo and freight rates have dropped sharply.[51] In 2009, the freight rates on the U.S.–Europe route were sturdiest, while the Asia-U.S. route fell the most.[51]

Container freight markets and rates[87]
$ per TEU from Shanghai to 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
United States West Coast 1372 2308 1667 2287 2033 1970
United States East Coast 2367 3499 3008 3416 3290 3720
Northern Europe 1395 1789 881 1353 1084 1161
Mediterranean 1397 1739 973 1336 1151 1253
South America (Santos) 2429 2236 1483 1771 1380 1103
South Africa (Durban) 1495 1481 991 1047 805 760
Singapore 318 210 256 231 233
East Japan 316 337 345 346 273

Liner companies responded to their overcapacity in several ways. For example, in early 2009, some container lines dropped their freight rates to zero on the Asia-Europe route, charging shippers only a surcharge to cover operating costs.[51] They decreased their overcapacity by lowering the ships' speed (a strategy called "slow steaming") and by laying up ships.[51] Slow steaming increased the length of the Europe-Asia routes to a record high of over 40 days.[51] Another strategy used by some companies was to manipulate the market by publishing notices of rate increases in the press, and when "a notice had been issued by one carrier, other carriers followed suit".[88]

The Trans-Siberian Railroad (TSR) has recently become a more viable alternative to container ships on the Asia-Europe route.[88] This railroad can typically deliver containers in 1/3 to 1/2 of the time of a sea voyage, and in late 2009 announced a 20% reduction in its container shipping rates.[88] With its 2009 rate schedule, the TSR will transport a forty-foot container to Poland from Yokohama for $2,820, or from Pusan for $2,154.[88]

Shipping industry alliances

Container ship industry alliances[89]
Alliance Partners Ships Weekly services Ports Port pairs
Ocean Alliance CMA CGM, COSCO Shipping Lines, Evergreen 323 40 95 1,571
THE Alliance Hapag-Lloyd, HMM Co Ltd., Ocean Network Express, Yang Ming 241 32 78 1,327
2M Alliance Maersk Line, Mediterranean Shipping Company 223 25 76 1,152

In an effort to control costs and maximize capacity utilization on ever-larger ships, vessel sharing agreements, co-operative agreements, and slot-exchanges have become a growing feature of the maritime container shipping industry. As of March 2015, 16 of the world's largest container shipping lines had consolidated their routes and services accounting for 95 percent of container cargo volumes moving in the dominant east-west trade routes.[90] Carriers remain operationally independent, as they are forbidden by antitrust regulators in multiple jurisdictions from colluding on freight rates or capacity. Similarities can be drawn with Airline alliances.

Container ports

 
CSCL Globe is one of the largest container ships in the world.

Container traffic through a port is often tracked in terms of twenty foot equivalent units or TEU of throughput.[91] As of 2019, the Port of Shanghai was the world's busiest container port, with 43,303,000 TEU handled.[92]

That year, seven of the busiest ten container ports were in the People's Republic of China, with Shanghai in 1st place, Ningbo 3rd, Shenzhen 4th, Guangzhou 5th, Qingdao 7th, Hong Kong 8th and Tianjin 9th.[92]

Rounding out the top ten ports were Singapore at 2nd, Busan in South Korea at 6th and Rotterdam in the Netherlands in the 10th position.[92]

In total, the busiest twenty container ports handled 220,905,805 TEU in 2009, almost half of the world's total estimated container traffic that year of 465,597,537 TEU.[91]

Losses and safety problems

It has been estimated that container ships lose between 2,000[93] and 10,000 containers at sea each year,[94] costing $370 million.[95] A survey for the six years 2008 through 2013 estimates average losses of individual containers overboard at 546 per year, and average total losses including catastrophic events such as vessel sinkings or groundings at 1,679 per year[96] More recently, a survey conducted by the WSC from 2008-2019, saw an average of 1,382 shipping containers lost at sea. However, in the 3-year period from 2017-2019, that number was nearly halved, down to an average of 779 containers lost annually. Most go overboard on the open sea during storms but there are some examples of whole ships being lost with their cargo.[97] One major shipping accident occurred in 2013 when the MOL Comfort sank with 4,293 containers onboard in the Indian Ocean.[98] When containers are dropped, they immediately become an environmental threat – termed "marine debris".[99] Once in the ocean, they fill with water and sink if the contents cannot hold air. Rough waters smash the container, sinking it quickly.[93]

As container ships get larger and stacking becomes higher, the threat of containers toppling into the sea during a storm increases. This results from a phenomenon called "parametric rolling," by which a ship can roll 30-40 degrees during rough seas creating a powerful torque on a 10-high stack of containers which can easily snap lashings and locks of the stack, resulting in losses into the sea.[100]

The threat of piracy can cost a container shipping company as much as $100 million per year due to longer routes and higher speed, particularly near East Africa.[101]

On 23 March 2021, the Ever Given container ship was passing through the Suez Canal on its way to Rotterdam from China when it became stuck and blocked the canal.[102]

 
Container fleet in 2006

See also

Notes

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  2. ^ a b c McNicholas, p. 45.
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  4. ^ From the American Heritage dictionary definition available on-line at Houghton Mifflin Company (2003). "Break bulk". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Huntingdon Valley, PA: Farlex Inc. Retrieved 2011-02-22..
  5. ^ Meurn, 2004, pp. 1–7.
  6. ^ Bohlman, 2001, p. 13.
  7. ^ Bohlman, 2001, p. 15.
  8. ^ UNCTAD, 2010, p. 84.
  9. ^ a b Lewandowski, Krzysztof (2016). "The containers ships, which really was the first?". Transport Means 2016, Proceedings of the 20th International Scientific Conference, October 5–7, 2016, Juodkrante, Lithuania.: 668–676. ISSN 1822-296X.
  10. ^ Lewandowski, Krzysztof (2014). "Czechoslovak activity to prepare European norms for containers before the Second World War" (PDF). Acta Logistica. 1 (4): 1–7. doi:10.22306/al.v1i4.25. ISSN 1339-5629.
  11. ^ | url= http://www.faktaomfartyg.se/autocarrier_1931_b_1.htm%7C
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  13. ^ Meurn, 2004, pp. 1–3.
  14. ^ Cudahy, 2004, p. 19.
  15. ^ Cudahy, 2004, p. 29.
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  19. ^ a b c d Hayler & Keever, 2004, p. 15-3.
  20. ^ a b MAN Diesel, 2009, p.6.
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  34. ^ a b Hayler & Keever, 2004, pp. 5–10.
  35. ^ Hayler & Keever, 2004, pp. 5-9 – 5-10.
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  37. ^ a b c d e Meurn and Sauerbier, 2006, p. 1-35.
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  39. ^ Peck and Hale, 2000, p. 2.
  40. ^ a b Peck and Hale, 2000, p. 12.
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  48. ^ UNCTAD 2010, p. 31.
  49. ^ UNCTAD 2006, p. 19.
  50. ^ UNCTAD 2010, p. 34.
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  56. ^ UNCTAD 2010, p. 56.
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  58. ^ a b c UNCTAD 2010, p. 50.
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  79. ^ Obergrenzen helfen Reedern und Häfen
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  83. ^ Huber 2001, p. 213.
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References

Shipboard operations

  • Conrad, Edward E. (1989). "12. Containership Operations". In Hayler, William (ed.). Merchant Marine Officers' Handbook: based on the original edition by Edward A. Turpin and William A. MacEwen (5th ed.). Cambridge, Md: Cornell Maritime Press. ISBN 978-0-87033-379-8.
  • Huber, Mark (2001). Tanker operations: a handbook for the person-in-charge (PIC). Cambridge, MD: Cornell Maritime Press. ISBN 978-0-87033-528-0.
  • Cudahy, Brian J. (2006). Box boats: how container ships changed the world. New York: Fordham University Press. ISBN 978-0-8232-2568-2.
  • Hayler, William B.; Keever, John M. (2003). American Merchant Seaman's Manual. Cornell Maritime Pr. ISBN 978-0-87033-549-5.
  • Peck and Hale (2000). (PDF). West Sayville, NY: Peck & Hale. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2011-03-01.
  • Sauerbier, Charles L.; Meurn, Robert J. (2004). Marine Cargo Operations: a guide to stowage. Cambridge, Md: Cornell Maritime Press. ISBN 978-0-87033-550-1.

Vessel categories

  • Autoridad del Canal de Panamá (2005). (PDF). Notices to Shipping. Balboa-Ancon: Autoridad del Canal de Panamá. pp. 11–12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-11. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  • Autoridad del Canal de Panamá (2006). (PDF). Notices to Shipping. Balboa-Ancon: Autoridad del Canal de Panamá. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-03-06.
  • Autoridad del Canal de Panamá (2009). (PDF). Notices to Shipping. Balboa-Ancon: Autoridad del Canal de Panamá. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-05-06. Retrieved 2011-03-06.
  • MAN Diesel (2009). (PDF). Copenhagen: MAN Diesel. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-05-07. Retrieved 2011-12-29.

Statistics

History

Safety and security

  • Michael McNicholas (2008). Maritime security: an introduction. Boston, MA: Butterworth Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-12-370859-5. Retrieved 2011-03-05.

External links

External image
  Loading sea-land vessels, c. 1962
  • Ancient and modern mariners: The romance of the high seas in an age of quantification – article in The Economist about a voyage on a 21st-century container ship
  • Rodrigo de Larrucea, Jaime. "Container Ship Safety" (PDF). Retrieved 19 April 2012.

container, ship, container, ship, also, called, boxship, spelled, containership, cargo, ship, that, carries, load, truck, size, intermodal, containers, technique, called, containerization, common, means, commercial, intermodal, freight, transport, carry, most,. A container ship also called boxship or spelled containership is a cargo ship that carries all of its load in truck size intermodal containers in a technique called containerization Container ships are a common means of commercial intermodal freight transport and now carry most seagoing non bulk cargo Two Maersk Line container ships Class overviewNameContainer shipSubclasses 1 Geared or gearless as per cargo handling type 2 Freighter or pure container as per passenger carrier type 3 Feeder or world wide foreign going vessel as per trade 4 Panamax or post Panamax vessel as per breadth of vessel lt or gt than 32 2m respectively Built1956 presentIn service9 535 ships as of 2010 1 General characteristicsPropulsionTypically diesel since 1990 2 SpeedTypically 16 25 knots 30 46 km h 19 29 MPH 2 CapacityUp to 24 000 TEUNotesReduced superstructure containers stacked on deck bulbous bowContainer ship capacity is measured in twenty foot equivalent units TEU Typical loads are a mix of 20 foot 1 TEU and 40 foot 2 TEU ISO standard containers with the latter predominant Today about 90 of non bulk cargo worldwide is transported by container ships and the largest modern container ships can carry up to 24 000 TEU e g Ever Ace Container ships now rival crude oil tankers and bulk carriers as the largest commercial seaborne vessels Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 2 1 Size categories 2 2 Cargo cranes 2 3 Cargo holds 2 4 Lashing systems 2 5 Bridge 3 Fleet characteristics 3 1 Flag states 3 2 Vessel purchases 3 3 Scrapping 3 4 Largest ships 3 5 Freight market 3 6 Shipping industry alliances 4 Container ports 5 Losses and safety problems 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Shipboard operations 8 2 Vessel categories 8 3 Statistics 8 4 History 8 5 Safety and security 9 External linksHistory Edit Container ships avoid the complex stevedoring of break bulk shipping The earliest container ships were converted T2 tankers in the 1940s after World War II Container ship Tan Cang 15 on the Saigon River in Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam A Delmas container ship unloading at the Zanzibar port in Tanzania Container feeder Helga arriving at Greenock Open top containership Rhoneborg at Fremantle There are two main types of dry cargo bulk cargo and break bulk cargo Bulk cargoes like grain or coal are transported unpackaged in the hull of the ship generally in large volume 3 Break bulk cargoes on the other hand are transported in packages and are generally manufactured goods 4 Before the advent of containerization in the 1950s break bulk items were loaded lashed unlashed and unloaded from the ship one piece at a time However by grouping cargo into containers 1 000 to 3 000 cubic feet 28 to 85 m3 of cargo or up to about 64 000 pounds 29 000 kg is moved at once and each container is secured to the ship once in a standardized way 5 Containerization has increased the efficiency of moving traditional break bulk cargoes significantly reducing shipping time by 84 and costs by 35 6 In 2001 more than 90 of world trade in non bulk goods was transported in ISO containers 7 In 2009 almost one quarter of the world s dry cargo was shipped by container an estimated 125 million TEU or 1 19 billion tonnes worth of cargo 8 The first ships designed to carry standardized load units were used in the late 18th century in England In 1766 James Brindley designed the box boat Starvationer with 10 wooden containers to transport coal from Worsley Delph to Manchester via the Bridgewater Canal 9 Before the Second World War the first container ships were used to carry the baggage of the luxury passenger train from London to Paris Southern Railway s Golden Arrow La Fleche d Or These containers were loaded in London or Paris and carried to ports of Dover or Calais on flat cars 10 In February 1931 the first container ship in the world was launched the Autocarrier owned by Southern Railway UK It had 21 slots for containers of Southern Railway 9 11 The earliest container ships after the Second World War were converted oil tankers built up from surplus T2 tankers after World War II In 1951 the first purpose built container vessels began operating in Denmark and between Seattle and Alaska The first commercially successful container ship was Ideal X 12 a T2 tanker owned by Malcom McLean which carried 58 metal containers between Newark New Jersey and Houston Texas on its first voyage 13 In 1955 McLean built his company McLean Trucking into one of the United States biggest freighter fleets In 1955 he purchased the small Pan Atlantic Steamship Company from Waterman Steamship and adapted its ships to carry cargo in large uniform metal containers 14 On April 26 1956 the first of these rebuilt container vessels Ideal X left the Port Newark in New Jersey and a new revolution in modern shipping resulted 15 16 MV Kooringa was the world s first fully cellular purpose built container ship and was built by Australian company Associated Steamships Pty Ltd in partnership with McIlwraith McEacharn amp Co and commissioned in May 1964 Container vessels eliminate the individual hatches holds and dividers of the traditional general cargo vessels The hull of a typical container ship is a huge warehouse divided into cells by vertical guide rails These cells are designed to hold cargo in pre packed units containers Shipping containers are usually made of steel but other materials like aluminum fiberglass or plywood are also used They are designed to be entirely transferred to and from smaller coastal carriers trains trucks or semi trailers and so are carried by different modes of transport during one voyage thus giving the name intermodal transport There are several types of containers and they are categorized according to their size and functions Today about 90 of non bulk cargo worldwide is transported by container and modern container ships can carry over 24 000 TEU As a class container ships now rival crude oil tankers and bulk carriers as the largest commercial vessels on the ocean Although containerization caused a revolution in the world of shipping its introduction was not easy Ports railway railroad in the US companies and shippers were concerned about the huge costs of developing the ports and railway infrastructure needed to handle container ships and for the movement of containers on land by rail and road Trade unions were concerned about massive job loss among port and dock workers at ports as containers were sure to eliminate several manual jobs of cargo handling It took ten years of legal battles before container ships would be pressed into international service In 1966 a container liner service from the US to the Dutch city of Rotterdam commenced Containerization changed not only the face of shipping but it also revolutionized world trade A container ship can be loaded and unloaded in a few hours compared to days in a traditional cargo vessel This besides cutting labor costs has greatly reduced shipping times between ports for example it takes a few weeks instead of months for a consignment to be delivered from India to Europe and vice versa It has resulted in less breakage due to less handling also there is less danger of cargo shifting during a voyage As containers are sealed and only opened at the destination theft has been greatly reduced Containerization has lowered shipping expense and decreased shipping time and this has in turn helped the growth of international trade Cargo that once arrived in cartons crates bales barrels or bags now comes in factory sealed containers with no indication to the human eye of their contents except for a product code that machines can scan and computers trace This system of tracking has been so exact that a two week voyage can be timed for arrival with an accuracy of under fifteen minutes It has resulted in such revolutions as on time guaranteed delivery and just in time manufacturing Raw materials arrive from factories in sealed containers less than an hour before they are required in manufacture resulting in reduced inventory expense Exporters load merchandise in boxes that are provided by the shipping companies They are then delivered to the docks by road rail or a combination of both for loading onto container ships Prior to containerization huge gangs of men would spend hours fitting various items of cargo into different holds Today cranes installed either on the pier or on the ship are used to place containers on board the ship When the hull has been fully loaded additional containers are stacked on the deck Today s largest container ships measure 400 metres 1 300 ft in length 17 They carry loads equal to the cargo carrying capacity of sixteen to seventeen pre World War II freighter ships Architecture EditThere are several key points in the design of modern container ships The hull similar to that of bulk carriers and general cargo ships is built around a strong keel 18 Into this frame is set one or more below deck cargo holds numerous tanks and the engine room The holds are topped by hatch covers onto which more containers can be stacked Many container ships have cargo cranes installed on them and some have specialized systems for securing containers on board The hull of a modern cargo ship is a complex arrangement of steel plates and strengthening beams Resembling ribs and fastened at right angles to the keel are the ship s frames 18 The ship s main deck the metal platework that covers the top of the hull framework is supported by beams that are attached to the tops of the frames and run the full breadth of the ship 18 The beams not only support the deck but along with the deck frames and transverse bulkheads strengthen and reinforce the shell 18 Another feature of recent hulls is a set of double bottom tanks which provide a second watertight shell that runs most of the length of a ship 19 The double bottoms generally hold liquids such as fuel oil ballast water or fresh water 19 A ship s engine room houses its main engines and auxiliary machinery such as the fresh water and sewage systems electrical generators fire pumps and air conditioners 19 In most new ships the engine room is located in the aft portion 19 Size categories Edit Container ships are distinguished into 7 major size categories small feeder feeder feedermax Panamax Post Panamax New Panamax and ultra large 20 As of December 2012 there were 161 container ships in the VLCS class Very Large Container Ships more than 10 000 TEU and 51 ports in the world can accommodate them 21 The size of a Panamax vessel is limited by the original Panama canal s lock chambers which can accommodate ships with a beam of up to 32 31 m a length overall of up to 294 13 m and a draft of up to 12 04 m 22 The Post Panamax category has historically been used to describe ships with a moulded breadth over 32 31 m 23 however the Panama Canal expansion project has caused some changes in terminology The New Panamax category is based on the maximum vessel size that is able to transit a new third set of locks which opened in June 2016 24 25 The third set of locks were built to accommodate a container ship with a length overall of 366 metres 1 201 ft a maximum width of 49 metres 161 ft and tropical fresh water draft of 15 2 metres 50 ft 25 26 Such a vessel called New Panamax class is wide enough to carry 19 columns of containers can have a total capacity of approximately 12 000 TEU and is comparable in size to a capesize bulk carrier or a Suezmax tanker 26 Container ships under 3 000 TEU are generally called feeder ships or feeders They are small ships that typically operate between smaller container ports Some feeders collect their cargo from small ports drop it off at large ports for transshipment on larger ships and distribute containers from the large port to smaller regional ports 2 This size of vessel is the most likely to carry cargo cranes on board 27 Container ship size categories Name Capacity TEU 20 Length Beam Draft ExampleUltra Large Container Vessel ULCV 14 501 and higher 1 200 ft 366 m and longer 160 7 ft 49 m and wider 49 9 ft 15 2 m and deeper With a length of 400 m a width of 59 m draft of 14 5 m and a capacity of 18 270 TEU ships of the Maersk Triple E class are able to transit the Suez canal 28 photo MV Maersk Mc Kinney Moller New Panamax or Neopanamax 10 000 14 500 1 200 ft 366 m 160 7 ft 49 m 49 9 ft 15 2 m With a beam of 43 m ships of the COSCO Guangzhou class are much too big to fit through the Panama Canal s old locks but could easily fit through the new expansion photo The 9 500 TEU MV COSCO Guangzhou pierside in Hamburg Post Panamax 5 101 10 000Panamax 3 001 5 100 965 ft 294 13 m 106 ft 32 31 m 39 5 ft 12 04 m Ships of the Bay class are at the upper limit of the Panamax class with an overall length of 292 15 m beam of 32 2m and maximum depth of 13 3 m 29 photo The 4 224 TEU MV Providence Bay passing through the Panama Canal Feedermax 2 001 3 000 Container ships under 3 000 TEU are typically called feeders In some areas of the world they might be outfitted with cargo cranes photo The 384 TEU MV TransAtlantic at anchor 30 Feeder 1 001 2 000Small feeder Up to 1 000Cargo cranes Edit See also Lift on lift off Cargo cranes on a US navy container ship A major characteristic of a container ship is whether it has cranes installed for handling its cargo Those that have cargo cranes are called geared and those that don t are called ungeared or gearless The earliest purpose built container ships in the 1970s were all gearless 27 Since then the percentage of geared newbuilds has fluctuated widely but has been decreasing overall with only 7 5 of the container ship capacity in 2009 being equipped with cranes 27 While geared container ships are more flexible in that they can visit ports that are not equipped with pierside container cranes they suffer from several drawbacks 27 To begin with geared ships will cost more to purchase than a gearless ship 27 Geared ships also incur greater recurring expenses such as maintenance and fuel costs 27 The United Nations Council on Trade and Development characterizes geared ships as a niche market only appropriate for those ports where low cargo volumes do not justify investment in port cranes or where the public sector does not have the financial resources for such investment 27 Instead of the rotary cranes some geared ships have gantry cranes installed 31 These cranes specialized for container work are able to roll forward and aft on rails 31 In addition to the additional capital expense and maintenance costs these cranes generally load and discharge containers much more slowly than their shoreside counterparts 31 The introduction and improvement of shoreside container cranes have been a key to the success of the container ship 31 The first crane that was specifically designed for container work was built in California s Port of Alameda in 1959 31 By the 1980s shoreside gantry cranes were capable of moving containers on a 3 minute cycle or up to 400 tons per hour 31 In March 2010 at Port Klang in Malaysia a new world record was set when 734 container moves were made in a single hour 32 The record was achieved using 9 cranes to simultaneously load and unload MV CSCL Pusan a ship with a capacity of 9 600 TEU 32 Vessels in the 1 500 2 499 TEU range are the most likely size class to have cranes with more than 60 of this category being geared ships 27 Slightly less than a third of the very smallest ships from 100 499 TEU are geared and almost no ships with a capacity of over 4 000 TEU are geared 27 A view into the holds of a container ship The vertical cell guides organize containers athwartships Cargo holds Edit Efficiency has always been key in the design of container ships 33 While containers may be carried on conventional break bulk ships cargo holds for dedicated container ships are specially constructed to speed loading and unloading and to efficiently keep containers secure while at sea 33 A key aspect of container ship specialization is the design of the hatches the openings from the main deck to the cargo holds 34 The hatch openings stretch the entire breadth of the cargo holds and are surrounded by a raised steel structure known as the hatch coaming 33 34 On top of the hatch coamings are the hatch covers Until the 1950s hatches were typically secured with wooden boards and tarpaulins held down with battens 35 Today some hatch covers can be solid metal plates that are lifted on and off the ship by cranes while others are articulated mechanisms that are opened and closed using powerful hydraulic rams Another key component of dedicated container ship design is the use of cell guides 33 Cell guides are strong vertical structures constructed of metal installed into a ship s cargo holds 33 These structures guide containers into well defined rows during loading and provide some support for containers against the ship s rolling at sea 33 So fundamental to container ship design are cell guides that organizations such as the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development use their presence to distinguish dedicated container ships from general break bulk cargo ships 23 A system of three dimensions is used in cargo plans to describe the position of a container aboard the ship 36 The first coordinate is the bay which starts at the front of the ship and increases aft 36 The second coordinate is the row 36 Rows on the starboard side are given odd numbers and those on the port side are given even numbers 36 The rows nearest the centerline are given low numbers and the numbers increase for slots further from the centerline 36 The third coordinate is the tier with the first tier at the bottom of the cargo holds the second tier on top of that and so forth 36 Container ships only take 20 foot 40 foot and 45 foot containers 45 footers only fit above deck 40 foot containers are the primary container size making up about 90 of all container shipping and since container shipping moves 90 of the world s freight over 80 of the world s freight moves via 40 foot containers Lashing systems Edit Twist locks and lashing rods pictured are widely used to secure containers aboard ships Numerous systems are used to secure containers aboard ships depending on factors such as the type of ship the type of container and the location of the container 37 38 Stowage inside the holds of fully cellular FC ships is simplest typically using simple metal forms called container guides locating cones and anti rack spacers to lock the containers together 39 Above decks without the extra support of the cell guides more complicated equipment is used 37 Three types of systems are currently in wide use lashing systems locking systems and buttress systems 37 Lashing systems secure containers to the ship using devices made from wire rope rigid rods or chains and devices to tension the lashings such as turnbuckles 37 The effectiveness of lashings is increased by securing containers to each other either by simple metal forms such as stacking cones or more complicated devices such as twist lock stackers 37 A typical twist lock is inserted into the casting hole of one container and rotated to hold it in place then another container is lowered on top of it 40 The two containers are locked together by twisting the device s handle 40 A typical twist lock is constructed of forged steel and ductile iron and has a shear strength of 48 tonnes 41 The buttress system used on some large container ships uses a system of large towers attached to the ship at both ends of each cargo hold 42 As the ship is loaded a rigid removable stacking frame is added structurally securing each tier of containers together 42 Bridge Edit Container ships have typically had a single bridge and accommodation unit towards the rear but to reconcile demand for larger container capacity with SOLAS visibility requirements several new designs have been developed As of 2015 update some large container ships are being developed with the bridge further forward separate from the exhaust stack Some smaller container ships working in European ports and rivers have liftable wheelhouses which can be lowered to pass under low bridges Fleet characteristics EditLargest container ship operators 2022 43 MSC Switzerland Italy Maersk Line Denmark CMA CGM France COSCO China Hapag Lloyd Germany ONE Japan Evergreen Taiwan HMM South Korea Yang Ming Taiwan ZIM IsraelFleet capacity April 14 2022 44 fleet TEUMSC 4339852Maersk 4245962CMA CGM 3261052COSCO 2927413Hapag Lloyd 1742598ONE 1515708Evergreen 1504564HMM 820320Yang Ming 666164ZIM 463277 Worldwide capacity 45 46 year million TEU1990 1 52000 4 32008 10 62012 15 42017 20 3 As of 2010 update container ships made up 13 3 of the world s fleet in terms of deadweight tonnage 47 The world s total of container ship deadweight tonnage has increased from 11 million DWT in 1980 to 169 0 million DWT in 2010 48 The combined deadweight tonnage of container ships and general cargo ships which also often carry containers represents 21 8 of the world s fleet 49 As of 2009 update the average age of container ships worldwide was 10 6 years making them the youngest general vessel type followed by bulk carriers at 16 6 years oil tankers at 17 years general cargo ships at 24 6 years and others at 25 3 years 50 Most of the world s carrying capacity in fully cellular container ships is in the liner service where ships trade on scheduled routes 27 51 As of January 2010 the top 20 liner companies controlled 67 5 of the world s fully cellular container capacity with 2 673 vessels of an average capacity of 3 774 TEU 1 The remaining 6 862 fully cellular ships have an average capacity of 709 TEU each 1 The vast majority of the capacity of fully cellular container ships used in the liner trade is owned by German shipowners with approximately 75 owned by Hamburg brokers 51 It is a common practice for the large container lines to supplement their own ships with chartered in ships for example in 2009 48 9 of the tonnage of the top 20 liner companies was chartered in in this manner 51 Flag states Edit International law requires that every merchant ship be registered in a country called its flag state 52 A ship s flag state exercises regulatory control over the vessel and is required to inspect it regularly certify the ship s equipment and crew and issue safety and pollution prevention documents As of 2006 update the United States Bureau of Transportation Statistics count 2 837 container ships of 10 000 long tons deadweight DWT or greater worldwide 53 Panama was the world s largest flag state for container ships with 541 of the vessels in its registry 53 Seven other flag states had more than 100 registered container ships Liberia 415 Germany 248 Singapore 177 Cyprus 139 the Marshall Islands 118 and the United Kingdom 104 53 The Panamanian Liberian and Marshallese flags are open registries and considered by the International Transport Workers Federation to be flags of convenience 54 By way of comparison traditional maritime nations such as the United States and Japan only had 75 and 11 registered container ships respectively 53 Vessel purchases Edit In recent years oversupply of container ship capacity has caused prices for new and used ships to fall From 2008 to 2009 new container ship prices dropped by 19 33 while prices for 10 year old container ships dropped by 47 69 55 In March 2010 the average price for a geared 500 TEU container ship was 10 million while gearless ships of 6 500 and 12 000 TEU averaged prices of 74 million and 105 million respectively 56 At the same time secondhand prices for 10 year old geared container ships of 500 2 500 and 3 500 TEU capacity averaged prices of 4 million 15 million and 18 million respectively 57 In 2009 11 669 000 gross tons of newly built container ships were delivered 58 Over 85 of this new capacity was built in the Republic of Korea China and Japan with Korea accounting for over 57 of the world s total alone 58 New container ships accounted for 15 of the total new tonnage that year behind bulk carriers at 28 9 and oil tankers at 22 6 58 Scrapping Edit Most ships are removed from the fleet through a process known as scrapping 59 Scrapping is rare for ships under 18 years old and common for those over 40 years in age 60 Ship owners and buyers negotiate scrap prices based on factors such as the ship s empty weight called light ton displacement or LTD and prices in the scrap metal market 61 Scrapping rates are volatile the price per light ton displacement has swung from a high of 650 per LTD in mid 2008 to 200 per LTD in early 2009 before building to 400 per LTD in March 2010 62 As of 2009 update over 96 of the world s scrapping activity takes place in China India Bangladesh and Pakistan 63 The global economic downturn of 2008 2009 resulted in more ships than usual being sold for scrap 62 In 2009 364 300 TEU worth of container ship capacity was scrapped up from 99 900 TEU in 2008 62 Container ships accounted for 22 6 of the total gross tonnage of ships scrapped that year 64 Despite the surge the capacity removed from the fleet only accounted for 3 of the world s container ship capacity 62 The average age of container ships scrapped in 2009 was 27 0 years 64 Largest ships Edit 15 largest container ship classes listed by TEU capacity Built Name Classsize Maximum TEU Sources2021 Ever Ace 6 23 9922020 HMM Algeciras 7 23 9642020 HMM Oslo 5 23 8202019 MSC Gulsun 6 23 7562019 MSC Mina 10 23 6562020 CMA CGM Jacques Saade 9 23 1122017 OOCL Hong Kong 6 21 413 65 2018 COSCO Shipping Universe 6 21 237 66 2018 CMA CGM Antoine de Saint Exupery 3 20 954 67 2017 Madrid Maersk 11 20 568 68 2017 MOL Truth 2 20 182 69 2017 MOL Triumph 4 20 170 70 2019 Ever Glory 4 20 1602018 Ever Goods 7 20 1242018 COSCO Shipping Taurus 5 20 119Main article List of largest container ships Economies of scale have dictated an upward trend in the size of container ships in order to reduce expenses However there are certain limitations to the size of container ships Primarily these are the availability of sufficiently large main engines and the availability of a sufficient number of ports and terminals prepared and equipped to handle ultra large container ships Furthermore the permissible maximum ship dimensions in some of the world s main waterways could present an upper limit in terms of vessel growth This primarily concerns the Suez Canal and the Singapore Strait In 2008 the South Korean shipbuilder STX announced plans to construct a container ship capable of carrying 22 000 TEU 71 and with a proposed length of 450 m 1 480 ft and a beam of 60 m 200 ft 72 If constructed the container ship would become the largest seagoing vessel in the world 73 Since even very large container ships are vessels with relatively low draft compared to large tankers and bulk carriers there is still considerable room for vessel growth Compared to today s largest container ships Maersk Line s 15 200 TEU Emma Maersk type series a 20 000 TEU container ship would only be moderately larger in terms of exterior dimensions According to a 2011 estimate an ultra large container ship of 20 250 TEU would measure 440 m 59 m 1 444 ft 194 ft compared to 397 71 m 56 40 m 1 304 8 ft 185 0 ft for the Emma Maersk class 74 75 It would have an estimated deadweight of circa 220 000 tons While such a vessel might be near the upper limit for a Suez Canal passage the so called Malaccamax concept for Straits of Malacca does not apply for container ships since the Malacca and Singapore Straits draft limit of about 21 metres 69 ft is still above that of any conceivable container ship design In 2011 Maersk announced plans to build a new Triple E family of container ships with a capacity of 18 000 TEU with an emphasis on lower fuel consumption 76 Ever Given in March 2020 at the ECT Delta terminal in the Port of Rotterdam In the present market situation main engines will not be as much of a limiting factor for vessel growth either The steadily rising expense of fuel oil in the early 2010s had prompted most container lines to adapt a slower more economical voyage speed of about 21 knots compared to earlier top speeds of 25 or more knots Subsequently newly built container ships can be fitted with a smaller main engine Engine types fitted to today s ships of 14 000 TEU are thus sufficiently large to propel future vessels of 20 000 TEU or more Maersk Line the world s largest container shipping line nevertheless opted for twin engines two smaller engines working two separate propellers when ordering a series of ten 18 000 TEU vessels from Daewoo Shipbuilding in February 2011 77 The ships were delivered between 2013 and 2014 In 2016 some experts believed that the current largest container ships are at the optimum size and could not economically be larger as port facilities would be too expensive port handling too time consuming the number of suitable ports too low and insurance cost too high 78 79 In March 2017 the first ship with an official capacity over 20 000 TEUs was christened at Samsung Heavy Industries MOL Triumph has a capacity of 20 150 TEUs Samsung Heavy Industries was expected to deliver several ships of over 20 000 TEUs in 2017 and has orders for at least ten vessels in that size range for OOCL and MOL 70 Freight market Edit The act of hiring a ship to carry cargo is called chartering Outside special bulk cargo markets ships are hired by three types of charter agreements the voyage charter the time charter and the bareboat charter 80 In a voyage charter the charterer rents the vessel from the loading port to the discharge port 81 In a time charter the vessel is hired for a set period of time to perform voyages as the charterer directs 81 In a bareboat charter the charterer acts as the ship s operator and manager taking on responsibilities such as providing the crew and maintaining the vessel 82 The completed chartering contract is known as a charter party 83 The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD tracks in its 2010 Review of Maritime Trade two aspects of container shipping prices 84 The first one is a chartering price specifically the price to time charter a 1 TEU slot for 14 tonnes of cargo on a container ship 51 The other is the freight rate or comprehensive daily cost to deliver one TEU worth of cargo on a given route 51 85 As a result of the late 2000s recession both indicators showed sharp drops during 2008 2009 and have shown signs of stabilization since 2010 UNCTAD uses the Hamburg Shipbrokers Association formally the Vereinigung Hamburger Schiffsmakler und Schiffsagenten e V or VHSS for short as its main industry source for container ship freight prices 51 The VHSS maintains a few indices of container ship charter prices The oldest which dates back to 1998 is called the Hamburg Index 51 This index considers time charters on fully cellular container ships controlled by Hamburg brokers 51 It is limited to charters of 3 months or more and presented as the average daily cost in U S dollars for a one TEU slot with a weight of 14 tonnes 51 The Hamburg Index data is divided into ten categories based primarily on vessel carrying capacity 51 Two additional categories exist for small vessels of under 500 TEU that carry their own cargo cranes 51 In 2007 VHSS started another index the New ConTex which tracks similar data obtained from an international group of shipbrokers 51 The Hamburg Index shows some clear trends in recent chartering markets First rates were generally increasing from 2000 to 2005 From 2005 to 2008 rates slowly decreased and in mid 2008 began a dramatic decline of approximately 75 which lasted until rates stabilized in April 2009 51 Rates have ranged from 2 70 to 35 40 in this period with prices generally lower on larger ships The most resilient sized vessel in this time period were those from 200 to 300 TEU a fact that the United Nations Council on Trade and Development attributes to lack of competition in this sector 51 Overall in 2010 these rates rebounded somewhat but remained at approximately half of their 2008 values 51 As of 2011 the index shows signs of recovery for container shipping and combined with increases in global capacity indicates a positive outlook for the sector in the near future 51 2008 2009 freight rates in 1000 US TEU 86 From To 2008 2009Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4Asia U S 1 8 1 8 1 9 1 9 1 7 1 4 1 2 1 3U S Asia 0 8 1 0 1 2 1 2 0 9 0 8 0 8 0 9Europe Asia 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 9 0 7 0 8 0 9Asia Europe 2 0 1 9 1 8 1 6 1 0 0 9 1 0 1 4U S Europe 1 3 1 4 1 6 1 7 1 5 1 4 1 4 1 5Europe U S 1 6 1 6 1 6 1 6 1 3 1 2 1 1 1 3 Year average daily charter rates for a 1 TEU 14 tonne slot have varied from 2 70 to 35 40 between 2000 and 2010 UNCTAD also tracks container freight rates Freight rates are expressed as the total price in U S dollars for a shipper to transport one TEU worth of cargo along a given route 51 Data is given for the three main container liner routes U S Asia U S Europe and Europe Asia 51 Prices are typically different between the two legs of a voyage for example the Asia U S rates have been significantly higher than the return U S Asia rates in recent years 51 Generally from the fourth quarter of 2008 through the third quarter of 2009 both the volume of container cargo and freight rates have dropped sharply 51 In 2009 the freight rates on the U S Europe route were sturdiest while the Asia U S route fell the most 51 Container freight markets and rates 87 per TEU from Shanghai to 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014United States West Coast 1372 2308 1667 2287 2033 1970United States East Coast 2367 3499 3008 3416 3290 3720Northern Europe 1395 1789 881 1353 1084 1161Mediterranean 1397 1739 973 1336 1151 1253South America Santos 2429 2236 1483 1771 1380 1103South Africa Durban 1495 1481 991 1047 805 760Singapore 318 210 256 231 233East Japan 316 337 345 346 273Liner companies responded to their overcapacity in several ways For example in early 2009 some container lines dropped their freight rates to zero on the Asia Europe route charging shippers only a surcharge to cover operating costs 51 They decreased their overcapacity by lowering the ships speed a strategy called slow steaming and by laying up ships 51 Slow steaming increased the length of the Europe Asia routes to a record high of over 40 days 51 Another strategy used by some companies was to manipulate the market by publishing notices of rate increases in the press and when a notice had been issued by one carrier other carriers followed suit 88 The Trans Siberian Railroad TSR has recently become a more viable alternative to container ships on the Asia Europe route 88 This railroad can typically deliver containers in 1 3 to 1 2 of the time of a sea voyage and in late 2009 announced a 20 reduction in its container shipping rates 88 With its 2009 rate schedule the TSR will transport a forty foot container to Poland from Yokohama for 2 820 or from Pusan for 2 154 88 Shipping industry alliances Edit Container ship industry alliances 89 Alliance Partners Ships Weekly services Ports Port pairsOcean Alliance CMA CGM COSCO Shipping Lines Evergreen 323 40 95 1 571THE Alliance Hapag Lloyd HMM Co Ltd Ocean Network Express Yang Ming 241 32 78 1 3272M Alliance Maersk Line Mediterranean Shipping Company 223 25 76 1 152In an effort to control costs and maximize capacity utilization on ever larger ships vessel sharing agreements co operative agreements and slot exchanges have become a growing feature of the maritime container shipping industry As of March 2015 16 of the world s largest container shipping lines had consolidated their routes and services accounting for 95 percent of container cargo volumes moving in the dominant east west trade routes 90 Carriers remain operationally independent as they are forbidden by antitrust regulators in multiple jurisdictions from colluding on freight rates or capacity Similarities can be drawn with Airline alliances Container ports Edit CSCL Globe is one of the largest container ships in the world Further information List of world s busiest container ports Container traffic through a port is often tracked in terms of twenty foot equivalent units or TEU of throughput 91 As of 2019 update the Port of Shanghai was the world s busiest container port with 43 303 000 TEU handled 92 That year seven of the busiest ten container ports were in the People s Republic of China with Shanghai in 1st place Ningbo 3rd Shenzhen 4th Guangzhou 5th Qingdao 7th Hong Kong 8th and Tianjin 9th 92 Rounding out the top ten ports were Singapore at 2nd Busan in South Korea at 6th and Rotterdam in the Netherlands in the 10th position 92 In total the busiest twenty container ports handled 220 905 805 TEU in 2009 almost half of the world s total estimated container traffic that year of 465 597 537 TEU 91 Losses and safety problems EditIt has been estimated that container ships lose between 2 000 93 and 10 000 containers at sea each year 94 costing 370 million 95 A survey for the six years 2008 through 2013 estimates average losses of individual containers overboard at 546 per year and average total losses including catastrophic events such as vessel sinkings or groundings at 1 679 per year 96 More recently a survey conducted by the WSC from 2008 2019 saw an average of 1 382 shipping containers lost at sea However in the 3 year period from 2017 2019 that number was nearly halved down to an average of 779 containers lost annually Most go overboard on the open sea during storms but there are some examples of whole ships being lost with their cargo 97 One major shipping accident occurred in 2013 when the MOL Comfort sank with 4 293 containers onboard in the Indian Ocean 98 When containers are dropped they immediately become an environmental threat termed marine debris 99 Once in the ocean they fill with water and sink if the contents cannot hold air Rough waters smash the container sinking it quickly 93 As container ships get larger and stacking becomes higher the threat of containers toppling into the sea during a storm increases This results from a phenomenon called parametric rolling by which a ship can roll 30 40 degrees during rough seas creating a powerful torque on a 10 high stack of containers which can easily snap lashings and locks of the stack resulting in losses into the sea 100 The threat of piracy can cost a container shipping company as much as 100 million per year due to longer routes and higher speed particularly near East Africa 101 On 23 March 2021 the Ever Given container ship was passing through the Suez Canal on its way to Rotterdam from China when it became stuck and blocked the canal 102 Container fleet in 2006See also Edit Transport portalBBC Box Container on barge Environmental impact of shipping List of largest container ships List of world s longest ships Ship resistance and propulsionNotes Edit a b c UNCTAD 2010 p 33 a b c McNicholas p 45 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container ships changed the world New York Fordham University Press ISBN 978 0 8232 2568 2 Hayler William B Keever John M 2003 American Merchant Seaman s Manual Cornell Maritime Pr ISBN 978 0 87033 549 5 Peck and Hale 2000 Container Stowage and Securing Systems PDF West Sayville NY Peck amp Hale Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2011 03 01 Sauerbier Charles L Meurn Robert J 2004 Marine Cargo Operations a guide to stowage Cambridge Md Cornell Maritime Press ISBN 978 0 87033 550 1 Vessel categories Edit Autoridad del Canal de Panama 2005 MR Notice to Shipping Number N 1 2005 PDF Notices to Shipping Balboa Ancon Autoridad del Canal de Panama pp 11 12 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 11 Retrieved 2008 04 01 Autoridad del Canal de Panama 2006 Proposal for the Expansion of the Panama Canal Third Set of Locks Project PDF Notices to Shipping Balboa Ancon Autoridad del Canal de Panama Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2011 03 06 Autoridad del Canal de Panama 2009 Dimensions for Future Lock Chambers and New Panamax Vessels PDF Notices to Shipping Balboa Ancon Autoridad del Canal de Panama Archived from the original PDF on 2009 05 06 Retrieved 2011 03 06 MAN Diesel 2009 Propulsion Trends in Container Vessels PDF Copenhagen MAN Diesel Archived from the original PDF on 2012 05 07 Retrieved 2011 12 29 Statistics Edit Bureau of Transportation Statistics 2007 2008 Maritime Trade amp Transportation PDF Washington D C United States Department of Transportation Research and Innovative Technology Administration Archived from the original PDF on 2009 05 10 Retrieved 2011 03 02 Central Intelligence Agency 2009 CIA World Factbook 2009 Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 60239 080 5 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific 2009 Review of Developments in Transport in Asia and the Pacific 2007 Data and Trends Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific New York United Nations pp 144 146 ISBN 978 92 1 120534 3 Retrieved 2011 03 05 United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD 2010 Review of Maritime Transport 2010 PDF New York and Geneva United Nations ISBN 978 92 1 112810 9 permanent dead link United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD 2012 Review of Maritime Transport 2012 PDF New York and Geneva United Nations ISBN 978 92 1 112860 4 History Edit Bohlman Michael T September 2001 ISO s container standards are nothing but good news PDF ISO Bulletin 12 15 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 04 09 The New Scientist 22 May 1958 News and Comments New Scientist 4 79 10 Archived from the original on 7 July 2014 Cudahy Brian J September October 2006 The Containership Revolution Malcom McLean s 1956 Innovation Goes Global PDF TR News 246 5 9 Retrieved 2011 03 01 Horizon Lines History of Sea Land CSX Lines and Horizon Lines Timeline 1956 Present Horizon Lines web site Archived from the original on 2010 12 27 Retrieved 2011 02 24 International Confederation of Free Trade Unions Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD International Transport Workers Federation Greenpeace International 2002 More Troubled Waters Fishing Pollution and FOCs PDF Johannesburg 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development Retrieved 2010 06 12 permanent dead link Jankowski William M 2003 Maritime Shipping Container Security and the Defense Transportation System Problems and Policy in the 21st Century M S thesis Naval Postgraduate School Archived from the original on 2011 06 29 Retrieved 2011 02 23 Levinson Marc 2006 The Box How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 12324 0 Nichols C Reid Williams Robert G November 2008 Encyclopedia of Marine Science Infobase Publishing pp 121 122 ISBN 978 0 8160 5022 2 Retrieved 8 March 2011 Roland Alex Bolster W Jeffrey Keyssar Alexander 2008 The way of the ship America s maritime history reenvisioned Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 470 13600 3 The container industry The world in a box The Economist 2006 03 16 Retrieved 2011 02 22 Safety and security Edit Michael McNicholas 2008 Maritime security an introduction Boston MA Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 12 370859 5 Retrieved 2011 03 05 External links EditExternal image Loading sea land vessels c 1962 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Container ships Ancient and modern mariners The romance of the high seas in an age of quantification article in The Economist about a voyage on a 21st century container ship Rodrigo de Larrucea Jaime Container Ship Safety PDF Retrieved 19 April 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Container ship amp oldid 1131578427, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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