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ZIM (shipping company)

Zim Integrated Shipping Services Ltd., commonly known as ZIM (Hebrew: צים, tsim; a biblical word meaning "a fleet of ships", Numbers 24:24), is a publicly held Israeli international cargo shipping company, and one of the top 20 global carriers.[1] The company's headquarters are in Haifa, Israel; Originating in 1945, ZIM has traded on the New York Stock Exchange since 2021.[2][3][4] From 1948 to 2004, it traded as ZIM Israel Navigation Company.

Zim Integrated Shipping Services Ltd.
Company typePublic
NYSE: ZIM
IndustryShipping
FoundedHaifa, Mandatory Palestine
June 7, 1945; 78 years ago (June 7, 1945)
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Eli Glickman (CEO)
Yair Seroussi (Chairman)
ServicesContainer shipping, Refrigerated Cargo,
Logistics
Revenue US$ $10.73 billion (2021)
US$ $4.65 Billion (2021)
ParentKenon Holdings
WebsiteOfficial website
Zim container ship
SS Kedma, ZIM's first ship in 1947
SS Kedma 1947
SS Shalom, a ZIM ocean liner in the 1960s
Mezada
Mezada Victims

History edit

20th century edit

1940s edit

ZIM was founded on June 7, 1945, as the ZIM Palestine Navigation Company Ltd, by the Jewish Agency, the Israel Maritime League and the Histadrut (General Federation of Laborers in the Land of Israel).[2] The first ship was purchased in partnership with Harris and Dixon (based in London) in 1947. This vessel was refurbished, renamed SS Kedma, and sailed to the future state of Israel in the summer of 1947.[5] After the State of Israel was established in 1948, the company was renamed ZIM Israel Navigation Company Ltd.[6] During its first years, its main task was transporting hundreds of thousands of immigrants to the emerging state.[5] Some of the other ships that had been used for clandestine immigration before the establishment of Israel as a state were confiscated by the British Mandate authorities and later joined the company's fleet. The company continued to purchase more ships, among them were SS Negba, SS Artza and SS Galila.[7]

During 1947–1949 Palestine war, the company was the sole maritime connection with the State of Israel, supplying food, freight and military equipment.

1950s edit

In 1953, some of the money from the reparations agreement between Israel and West Germany was allocated to the purchase and construction of new ships. The SS Bergensfjord, renamed Jerusalem, sailed the Israel-New York route,[8] Another ship purchased with reparations money was the SS Theodor Herzl .[9]

The company took delivery of its first new vessels, the 9800 ton passenger-cargo liners SS Israel and SS Zion - later known as SS Dolphin IV, in 1955 and 1956, respectively.

1957 saw the delivery of two more new ocean liners, the 10,000 ton sister ships SS Jerusalem and SS Theodor Herzl, followed by the more modest, 7,800 ton SS Moledet in 1961, which featured an all-Tourist Class layout, targeted principally to American tourists looking for affordable transportation to the Holy Land.

ZIM was invited in 1957 by the Government of Ghana to assist the setting up and management of a national shipping line. Black Star Line was formed with a 40% participation by ZIM and principally operated cargo services from West Africa.[7] A similar joint venture - Burma Five Star Line - was made with the Burmese Government in 1959.[7]

1960s edit

In 1950s and 1960s, ZIM concentrated on passenger ships, alongside a constant expansion of the cargo shipping business. Passenger liners were a common means of international transport before the emergence of cheap air transport, and pleasure cruises were also popular. ZIM sailed the Mediterranean Sea, as well as having regular routes to the United States. Some of its ships cruised to the Caribbean during the winter. 1964 saw the completion of the 25,000 ton ocean liner SS Shalom, which turned out to be a failure, marking the end of the ZIM passenger shipping era.[10]

Due to rising airline competition and the market failure of the expensive new Shalom, passenger services were gradually phased out between 1966-1969, as ZIM refocused on cargo shipping. Jerusalem was chartered out to British-based P&O Cruises in 1966 to become their Miami, then sold entirely in 1968. The sisters Israel and Zion were both sold in 1966, while the expensive, new Shalom was retired and sold in 1967. Theodor Herzl and Moledet completed ZIM's final transatlantic passenger sailings during 1969 and were sold off, marking the end of the company's passenger division.

During the 1960s, ZIM started to turn its focus to cargo ships, and obtained several special-purpose vessels, including refrigerated ships and oil tankers. ZIM transported crude oil from Iran to Israel and oil byproducts from Israel to Europe.[citation needed]

1970s edit

In the 1970s, ZIM expanded into the container shipping business. ZIM ordered six such ships, and gradually made this its main line of business.

1980s edit

In 1981, one of the company's ships, Mezada, was lost at sea. Zim went through a lull in maritime shipping at the beginning of the 1980s.[citation needed]

1990s edit

Zim built 15 more ships in Germany in the 1990s. At this time, the ownership of ZIM was divided between the Israeli government and Israel Corporation.[11]

21st century edit

2000s edit

In 2004, the Israel Corporation (which is controlled by the Ofer Brothers Group) purchased 49% of ZIM's shares held by the Israeli government, becoming the sole owner of the company.[11] The new official name after privatization became ZIM Integrated Shipping Services. The purchase deal for about five hundred million New Israeli Shekels was severely criticized by the press[12] and the State Comptroller of Israel[13] as being undervalued and becoming just another flag of convenience company. In 2007, ZIM sold its maritime logistics and forwarding services subsidiary NewLog to UTi Worldwide.[14]

 
ZIM Barcelona off California, 2008

In 2008, ZIM planned to launch an initial public offering and selling 25% of its shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, but due to the onset of the global economic crisis it was called off.[15] In 2009, ZIM required a cash injection of $450 million by the Ofer family and debt restructuring following the world's container shipping downturn.[16]

2010s edit

In 2010, ZIM regained profitability and in early 2011 ZIM renewed its plans for a flotation on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, but again had to postpone it due to the economic downturn and the drop in container shipping rates.[17]

In 2014, unloading of a ZIM ship at the Port of Oakland was delayed by anti-Israel protesters. Longshoremen declined to load the ship out of safety concerns, taking no position on the underlying dispute,[18] but unloaded the ship after their safety was assured.[19] Other protests in Los Angeles[20][21][22][23] and Tacoma, Washington[24] failed to stop the unloading of cargo from ZIM ships. A second demonstration bypassed Oakland for Los Angeles when longshoremen, not participating in the protest, refused to unload the ship after being physically threatened and their vehicles blocked when they tried to report for work.[25] Protesters' claim they impacted ZIM's shipping schedule was denied by the company, and the local Jewish Community Council denounced the "hateful" rhetoric of the demonstrators.[26]

In July 2014, by which time the company was almost wholly owned by Israel Corporation, ZIM was restructured with 68% of the group's shares owned by its creditors and bondholders, and 32% retained by Israel Corporation, and starting early 2015 by Kenon Holdings, a spin-off company of Israel Corporation.[27] In mid-to-late 2015, plans to revive an initial public offering were implemented. ZIM debuted on the New York Stock Exchange in January 2021, with the backing of Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and Barclays.[3]

2020s edit

In March 2021, Zim reported the biggest profit in its 75-year history.[28]

In December 2023 the Malaysian Government rescinded its permit for Zim to use their ports, responding to "Israel's actions that ignore basic humanitarian principles and violate international law" in the 2023 Israel-Hamas war.[29]

Operational statistics edit

  • Annual turnover 2018: $3.2 billion
  • TEU's Carried in 2018: 2,914,000 million
  • Total TEU Capacity (owned and chartered vessels): 344,460 TEU's
  • Containers: over 547,000 TEUs of various types
  • About 70 vessels, 13 fully or partly owned
  • Ports of Call: 180 throughout the world, with 10 strategically located hubs
  • Services: Over 70 lines and services, mostly on a weekly, fixed-day basis, covering all major trade routes with regional connections
  • Employees: ~4200
  • Regional Headquarters: Haifa (Israel), Norfolk, Virginia (USA), Liverpool (United Kingdom), Hamburg (Germany), Hong Kong
  • Agents: ZIM has more than 170 offices and representatives in over 100 countries throughout the world[30]

Fleet edit

Passenger Fleet[31] edit

Name Built Years with Zim Lines Yard Built Statistics Status
  SS Kedma 1926 1947-1952 Vickers Shipbuilding Ltd, Barrow-in-Furness, UK 3,504 GRT Scrapped 1957 in England
  SS Negbah 1915 1948-1956 Royal Schelde, Vlissingen, Netherlands 5,544 GRT Scrapped 1957 in Italy
  SS Jerusalem (I) 1913 1953-1959 Cammell Laird & Co., at Birkenhead, UK 10,699 gton Sold to Italy for scrapping in August 1959, arriving at La Spezia 13 August 1959
  SS Galilah 1915 1948-1952 Harlan and Hollingsworth (Bethlehem Steel) ship yards at Wilmington, DE, USA 3,899 GRT Scrapped in 1953 in Italy
SS Artsa 1930 1949-1963 Vegesack, Germany Scrapped in Haifa Israel
  SS Israel 1955 1955-1966 Deutsche Werft, Hamburg, Germany Deutsche Werft, Hamburg, Germany Scrapped in 1974 as the Angra do Heroismo in Tawain
  SS Zion 1956 1956-1966 Deutsche Werft, Hamburg, Germany Deutsche Werft, Hamburg, Germany Scrapped in 2003 as Dolphin IV
  SS Jerusalem (II) 1957 1957-1968 Deutsche Werft, Hamburg, Germany 9800 ton Sank on way to breakers yards in Taiwan on October 3, 1979
  SS Theodor Herzl 1957 1957-1969 Deutsche Werft, Hamburg, Germany 9800 ton In 1991 whilst being refitted at Piraeus sadly she caught fire and she sunk, pieces raised and scrapped.
SS Moledet 1961 1961-1969 A&C de Bretagne Nantes, France  7,811 GRT
  SS Shalom 1964 1964 -1968 Chantiers de l'Atlantique, St Nazaire, France 25,320 GRT Sunk outside Cape St. Francis, 26 July 2001

Cargo Fleet edit

Container ship classes of ZIM
Ship class Built Capacity (TEU) Ships in class Notes
2023–onwards 5,300 8 Long-term charter from Navios Maritime Partners[32]
2023–onwards 5,500 6 To be built by HJ Shipbuilding & Construction. Long-term charter from MPC Capital AG[33]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "PublicTop100". www.alphaliner.com.
  2. ^ a b "Once upon a time - the story of ZIM". ZIM. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Zim Wall Street IPO falls short". Globes. 28 January 2021. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  4. ^ "NYSE". www.nyse.com. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  5. ^ a b Cohen-Hattab, Kobi (Summer 2015). (PDF). Israel Studies. 20 (2). Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press: 114, 117. doi:10.2979/israelstudies.20.2.110. ISSN 1084-9513. S2CID 152327602. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 January 2021. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  6. ^ Goossens, Reuben. "Zim Israel Navigation Company". ssMaritime. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  7. ^ a b c Bar-Tikva, Chaim. "The fifty-years success story of a shipping company: 1945-1995". Friends of the National Maritime Museum. Haifa: Zim Israel Navigation Company Ltd. pp. 32–34. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  8. ^ . Simplon Postcards - The Passenger Ship Website. Archived from the original on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 31 December 2009.
  9. ^ "Germany Delivers Israel's Largest Passenger Ship As Reparations". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 1 May 1957. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
  10. ^ Micke Asklander. . Fakta om Fartyg (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 16 February 2008.
  11. ^ a b "Israel Corp. to acquire state's Zim stake for $115m". Globes. 13 January 2004.
  12. ^ Secrets of shakshuka, Haaretz[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ . mevaker.gov.il (in Hebrew). 2013. Archived from the original on 25 February 2012. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  14. ^ Tal, Levy (7 October 2006). . Haaretz. Archived from the original on 22 January 2014.
  15. ^ Wright, Robert (17 June 2008). "Israel Corp calls off Zim shipping flotation". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 7 May 2015.
  16. ^ Wright, Robert (24 November 2011). "Zim and MISC signal deepening container ship crisis". Financial Times.
  17. ^ Rochvarger, Michael (27 June 2011). "Ofers' Zim navigates around obstacles on way to Hong Kong Stock Exchange IPO". Haaretz.
  18. ^ "Volatile atmosphere at Gaza demonstration prevents Longshoremen from entering Port of Oakland terminal (ILWU Coast Longshore Division news release)". Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  19. ^ Lee, Henry (21 August 2014). "Ship hit by protests unloads, leaves Oakland". sfgate.com. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  20. ^ "Israeli ship remains at sea as thousands of protesters gather in Oakland". The Guardian. 17 August 2014. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  21. ^ "Calif. protesters block Israel-owned ship at Port of Oakland". Washington Times. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  22. ^ "Protesters: We prevented Zim ship from unloading cargo in LA". Haaretz. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  23. ^ "Local Groups Picket Israeli Ship at Port of Long Beach". Long Beach Post. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  24. ^ "Protesters Fail to Block Zim Ship in Tacoma". The Maritime Executive. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  25. ^ "Israeli cargo ship heads for L.A. to unload after Oakland protest". Reuters. 29 September 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  26. ^ "No blockade, Zim ship bypasses Oakland". The Jewish News of Northern California. 31 October 2014. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  27. ^ "Oakland workers on docks refuse to load shipo from Israel". San Francisco Star. 19 August 2014. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  28. ^ "'Revitalised' Zim reports biggest profit in its 75-year history". The Loadstar. 22 March 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  29. ^ Nadia Ragozhina, ed. (20 December 2023). "Malaysian PM welcomes ban on Israeli-flagged ships". BBC News. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
  30. ^ . www.zim.com. Archived from the original on 2 October 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  31. ^ "ZIM Line; SS Israel, Zion, Jerusalem (II), Theodor Herzl & MS Moledet". ssmaritime.com. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  32. ^ "ZIM confirms US$870 million charter deal for 13 boxships". Container News. 10 February 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  33. ^ "ZIM announces new chartering transaction for six 5,500 TEU newbuildings". Container News. 31 March 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • by Chaim Bar-Tikva. Haifa, 1996
  • The Test of Maritime Sovereignty: The Establishment of the Zim National Shipping Company and the Purchase of the Kedmah, 1945–1952 by Kobi Cohen-Hattab. Israel Studies, Volume 20, Number 2, Summer 2015, pp. 110–134, Indiana University Press

shipping, company, this, article, about, shipping, company, fictional, character, television, series, invader, integrated, shipping, services, commonly, known, hebrew, צים, tsim, biblical, word, meaning, fleet, ships, numbers, publicly, held, israeli, internat. This article is about the shipping company For the fictional character and television series see Invader Zim Zim Integrated Shipping Services Ltd commonly known as ZIM Hebrew צים tsim a biblical word meaning a fleet of ships Numbers 24 24 is a publicly held Israeli international cargo shipping company and one of the top 20 global carriers 1 The company s headquarters are in Haifa Israel Originating in 1945 ZIM has traded on the New York Stock Exchange since 2021 2 3 4 From 1948 to 2004 it traded as ZIM Israel Navigation Company Zim Integrated Shipping Services Ltd Company typePublicTraded asNYSE ZIMIndustryShippingFoundedHaifa Mandatory PalestineJune 7 1945 78 years ago June 7 1945 HeadquartersHaifa IsraelArea servedWorldwideKey peopleEli Glickman CEO Yair Seroussi Chairman ServicesContainer shipping Refrigerated Cargo LogisticsRevenueUS 10 73 billion 2021 Net incomeUS 4 65 Billion 2021 ParentKenon HoldingsWebsiteOfficial websiteZim container shipSS Kedma ZIM s first ship in 1947SS Kedma 1947SS Shalom a ZIM ocean liner in the 1960sMezadaMezada Victims Contents 1 History 1 1 20th century 1 1 1 1940s 1 1 2 1950s 1 1 3 1960s 1 1 4 1970s 1 1 5 1980s 1 1 6 1990s 1 2 21st century 1 2 1 2000s 1 2 2 2010s 1 2 3 2020s 2 Operational statistics 3 Fleet 3 1 Passenger Fleet 31 3 2 Cargo Fleet 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit20th century edit 1940s edit ZIM was founded on June 7 1945 as the ZIM Palestine Navigation Company Ltd by the Jewish Agency the Israel Maritime League and the Histadrut General Federation of Laborers in the Land of Israel 2 The first ship was purchased in partnership with Harris and Dixon based in London in 1947 This vessel was refurbished renamed SS Kedma and sailed to the future state of Israel in the summer of 1947 5 After the State of Israel was established in 1948 the company was renamed ZIM Israel Navigation Company Ltd 6 During its first years its main task was transporting hundreds of thousands of immigrants to the emerging state 5 Some of the other ships that had been used for clandestine immigration before the establishment of Israel as a state were confiscated by the British Mandate authorities and later joined the company s fleet The company continued to purchase more ships among them were SS Negba SS Artza and SS Galila 7 During 1947 1949 Palestine war the company was the sole maritime connection with the State of Israel supplying food freight and military equipment 1950s edit In 1953 some of the money from the reparations agreement between Israel and West Germany was allocated to the purchase and construction of new ships The SS Bergensfjord renamed Jerusalem sailed the Israel New York route 8 Another ship purchased with reparations money was the SS Theodor Herzl 9 The company took delivery of its first new vessels the 9800 ton passenger cargo liners SS Israel and SS Zion later known as SS Dolphin IV in 1955 and 1956 respectively 1957 saw the delivery of two more new ocean liners the 10 000 ton sister ships SS Jerusalem and SS Theodor Herzl followed by the more modest 7 800 ton SS Moledet in 1961 which featured an all Tourist Class layout targeted principally to American tourists looking for affordable transportation to the Holy Land ZIM was invited in 1957 by the Government of Ghana to assist the setting up and management of a national shipping line Black Star Line was formed with a 40 participation by ZIM and principally operated cargo services from West Africa 7 A similar joint venture Burma Five Star Line was made with the Burmese Government in 1959 7 1960s edit In 1950s and 1960s ZIM concentrated on passenger ships alongside a constant expansion of the cargo shipping business Passenger liners were a common means of international transport before the emergence of cheap air transport and pleasure cruises were also popular ZIM sailed the Mediterranean Sea as well as having regular routes to the United States Some of its ships cruised to the Caribbean during the winter 1964 saw the completion of the 25 000 ton ocean liner SS Shalom which turned out to be a failure marking the end of the ZIM passenger shipping era 10 Due to rising airline competition and the market failure of the expensive new Shalom passenger services were gradually phased out between 1966 1969 as ZIM refocused on cargo shipping Jerusalem was chartered out to British based P amp O Cruises in 1966 to become their Miami then sold entirely in 1968 The sisters Israel and Zion were both sold in 1966 while the expensive new Shalom was retired and sold in 1967 Theodor Herzl and Moledet completed ZIM s final transatlantic passenger sailings during 1969 and were sold off marking the end of the company s passenger division During the 1960s ZIM started to turn its focus to cargo ships and obtained several special purpose vessels including refrigerated ships and oil tankers ZIM transported crude oil from Iran to Israel and oil byproducts from Israel to Europe citation needed 1970s edit In the 1970s ZIM expanded into the container shipping business ZIM ordered six such ships and gradually made this its main line of business 1980s edit In 1981 one of the company s ships Mezada was lost at sea Zim went through a lull in maritime shipping at the beginning of the 1980s citation needed 1990s edit Zim built 15 more ships in Germany in the 1990s At this time the ownership of ZIM was divided between the Israeli government and Israel Corporation 11 21st century edit 2000s editIn 2004 the Israel Corporation which is controlled by the Ofer Brothers Group purchased 49 of ZIM s shares held by the Israeli government becoming the sole owner of the company 11 The new official name after privatization became ZIM Integrated Shipping Services The purchase deal for about five hundred million New Israeli Shekels was severely criticized by the press 12 and the State Comptroller of Israel 13 as being undervalued and becoming just another flag of convenience company In 2007 ZIM sold its maritime logistics and forwarding services subsidiary NewLog to UTi Worldwide 14 nbsp ZIM Barcelona off California 2008In 2008 ZIM planned to launch an initial public offering and selling 25 of its shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange but due to the onset of the global economic crisis it was called off 15 In 2009 ZIM required a cash injection of 450 million by the Ofer family and debt restructuring following the world s container shipping downturn 16 2010s edit In 2010 ZIM regained profitability and in early 2011 ZIM renewed its plans for a flotation on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange but again had to postpone it due to the economic downturn and the drop in container shipping rates 17 In 2014 unloading of a ZIM ship at the Port of Oakland was delayed by anti Israel protesters Longshoremen declined to load the ship out of safety concerns taking no position on the underlying dispute 18 but unloaded the ship after their safety was assured 19 Other protests in Los Angeles 20 21 22 23 and Tacoma Washington 24 failed to stop the unloading of cargo from ZIM ships A second demonstration bypassed Oakland for Los Angeles when longshoremen not participating in the protest refused to unload the ship after being physically threatened and their vehicles blocked when they tried to report for work 25 Protesters claim they impacted ZIM s shipping schedule was denied by the company and the local Jewish Community Council denounced the hateful rhetoric of the demonstrators 26 In July 2014 by which time the company was almost wholly owned by Israel Corporation ZIM was restructured with 68 of the group s shares owned by its creditors and bondholders and 32 retained by Israel Corporation and starting early 2015 by Kenon Holdings a spin off company of Israel Corporation 27 In mid to late 2015 plans to revive an initial public offering were implemented ZIM debuted on the New York Stock Exchange in January 2021 with the backing of Citigroup Goldman Sachs and Barclays 3 2020s edit In March 2021 Zim reported the biggest profit in its 75 year history 28 In December 2023 the Malaysian Government rescinded its permit for Zim to use their ports responding to Israel s actions that ignore basic humanitarian principles and violate international law in the 2023 Israel Hamas war 29 Operational statistics editAnnual turnover 2018 3 2 billion TEU s Carried in 2018 2 914 000 million Total TEU Capacity owned and chartered vessels 344 460 TEU s Containers over 547 000 TEUs of various types About 70 vessels 13 fully or partly owned Ports of Call 180 throughout the world with 10 strategically located hubs Services Over 70 lines and services mostly on a weekly fixed day basis covering all major trade routes with regional connections Employees 4200 Regional Headquarters Haifa Israel Norfolk Virginia USA Liverpool United Kingdom Hamburg Germany Hong Kong Agents ZIM has more than 170 offices and representatives in over 100 countries throughout the world 30 Fleet editPassenger Fleet 31 edit Name Built Years with Zim Lines Yard Built Statistics Status nbsp SS Kedma 1926 1947 1952 Vickers Shipbuilding Ltd Barrow in Furness UK 3 504 GRT Scrapped 1957 in England nbsp SS Negbah 1915 1948 1956 Royal Schelde Vlissingen Netherlands 5 544 GRT Scrapped 1957 in Italy nbsp SS Jerusalem I 1913 1953 1959 Cammell Laird amp Co at Birkenhead UK 10 699 gton Sold to Italy for scrapping in August 1959 arriving at La Spezia 13 August 1959 nbsp SS Galilah 1915 1948 1952 Harlan and Hollingsworth Bethlehem Steel ship yards at Wilmington DE USA 3 899 GRT Scrapped in 1953 in ItalySS Artsa 1930 1949 1963 Vegesack Germany Scrapped in Haifa Israel nbsp SS Israel 1955 1955 1966 Deutsche Werft Hamburg Germany Deutsche Werft Hamburg Germany Scrapped in 1974 as the Angra do Heroismo in Tawain nbsp SS Zion 1956 1956 1966 Deutsche Werft Hamburg Germany Deutsche Werft Hamburg Germany Scrapped in 2003 as Dolphin IV nbsp SS Jerusalem II 1957 1957 1968 Deutsche Werft Hamburg Germany 9800 ton Sank on way to breakers yards in Taiwan on October 3 1979 nbsp SS Theodor Herzl 1957 1957 1969 Deutsche Werft Hamburg Germany 9800 ton In 1991 whilst being refitted at Piraeus sadly she caught fire and she sunk pieces raised and scrapped SS Moledet 1961 1961 1969 A amp C de Bretagne Nantes France 7 811 GRT nbsp SS Shalom 1964 1964 1968 Chantiers de l Atlantique St Nazaire France 25 320 GRT Sunk outside Cape St Francis 26 July 2001Cargo Fleet edit Container ship classes of ZIM Ship class Built Capacity TEU Ships in class Notes2023 onwards 5 300 8 Long term charter from Navios Maritime Partners 32 2023 onwards 5 500 6 To be built by HJ Shipbuilding amp Construction Long term charter from MPC Capital AG 33 See also editIsrael Corporation Zodiac Maritime Edmond Wilhelm Brillant Top container shipping companiesReferences edit PublicTop100 www alphaliner com a b Once upon a time the story of ZIM ZIM Retrieved 31 January 2021 a b Zim Wall Street IPO falls short Globes 28 January 2021 Retrieved 1 February 2021 NYSE www nyse com Retrieved 1 February 2021 a b Cohen Hattab Kobi Summer 2015 The Test of Maritime Sovereignty The Establishment of the Zim National Shipping Company and the Purchase of the Kedmah 1945 1952 PDF Israel Studies 20 2 Bloomington IN Indiana University Press 114 117 doi 10 2979 israelstudies 20 2 110 ISSN 1084 9513 S2CID 152327602 Archived from the original PDF on 13 January 2021 Retrieved 18 October 2019 Goossens Reuben Zim Israel Navigation Company ssMaritime Retrieved 8 August 2021 a b c Bar Tikva Chaim The fifty years success story of a shipping company 1945 1995 Friends of the National Maritime Museum Haifa Zim Israel Navigation Company Ltd pp 32 34 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Bergensfjord 1 NAL 1913 46 Simplon Postcards The Passenger Ship Website Archived from the original on 13 November 2013 Retrieved 31 December 2009 Germany Delivers Israel s Largest Passenger Ship As Reparations Jewish Telegraphic Agency 1 May 1957 Retrieved 3 August 2022 Micke Asklander T S Shalom 1964 Fakta om Fartyg in Swedish Archived from the original on 1 May 2011 Retrieved 16 February 2008 a b Israel Corp to acquire state s Zim stake for 115m Globes 13 January 2004 Secrets of shakshuka Haaretz permanent dead link דוח שנתי 55ב לשנת 2004 ולחשבונות שנת הכספים 2003 הליך מכירתן של מניות צים שבידי המדינה Annual Report for 2004 and fiscal year 2003 Sale of ZIM shares held by the State mevaker gov il in Hebrew 2013 Archived from the original on 25 February 2012 Retrieved 19 March 2013 Tal Levy 7 October 2006 Zim s Newlog unit in merger talks with UTi and Transclal Haaretz Archived from the original on 22 January 2014 Wright Robert 17 June 2008 Israel Corp calls off Zim shipping flotation Financial Times Archived from the original on 7 May 2015 Wright Robert 24 November 2011 Zim and MISC signal deepening container ship crisis Financial Times Rochvarger Michael 27 June 2011 Ofers Zim navigates around obstacles on way to Hong Kong Stock Exchange IPO Haaretz Volatile atmosphere at Gaza demonstration prevents Longshoremen from entering Port of Oakland terminal ILWU Coast Longshore Division news release Retrieved 1 October 2014 Lee Henry 21 August 2014 Ship hit by protests unloads leaves Oakland sfgate com Retrieved 1 October 2014 Israeli ship remains at sea as thousands of protesters gather in Oakland The Guardian 17 August 2014 Retrieved 21 August 2014 Calif protesters block Israel owned ship at Port of Oakland Washington Times Retrieved 21 August 2014 Protesters We prevented Zim ship from unloading cargo in LA Haaretz Retrieved 26 August 2014 Local Groups Picket Israeli Ship at Port of Long Beach Long Beach Post Retrieved 26 August 2014 Protesters Fail to Block Zim Ship in Tacoma The Maritime Executive Retrieved 26 August 2014 Israeli cargo ship heads for L A to unload after Oakland protest Reuters 29 September 2014 Retrieved 1 October 2014 No blockade Zim ship bypasses Oakland The Jewish News of Northern California 31 October 2014 Retrieved 13 October 2017 Oakland workers on docks refuse to load shipo from Israel San Francisco Star 19 August 2014 Retrieved 19 August 2014 Revitalised Zim reports biggest profit in its 75 year history The Loadstar 22 March 2021 Retrieved 7 May 2021 Nadia Ragozhina ed 20 December 2023 Malaysian PM welcomes ban on Israeli flagged ships BBC News Retrieved 21 December 2023 Facts amp Figures www zim com Archived from the original on 2 October 2015 Retrieved 1 October 2015 ZIM Line SS Israel Zion Jerusalem II Theodor Herzl amp MS Moledet ssmaritime com Retrieved 4 July 2023 ZIM confirms US 870 million charter deal for 13 boxships Container News 10 February 2022 Retrieved 14 April 2022 ZIM announces new chartering transaction for six 5 500 TEU newbuildings Container News 31 March 2022 Retrieved 14 April 2022 External links editOfficial website nbsp Zim Israel Navigation Company Ltd The Fifty Years Success Story of a Shipping Company 1945 1995 by Chaim Bar Tikva Haifa 1996 The Test of Maritime Sovereignty The Establishment of the Zim National Shipping Company and the Purchase of the Kedmah 1945 1952 by Kobi Cohen Hattab Israel Studies Volume 20 Number 2 Summer 2015 pp 110 134 Indiana University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ZIM shipping company amp oldid 1215989217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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