Title: Commercial Shipping M06
1Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Learning objectives
- Describe the characteristics of bulk shipping
- Explain how bulk shipping developed, particularly
in terms of the key historical and economic
forces that have shaped this sector of the
industry - Discuss the major characteristics of dry bulk
shipping operations - Discuss current trends and issues in the tanker
industry and evaluate the industrys future
prospects - Discuss the current regulatory systems for the
prevention of marine pollution from tankers
2Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Bulk shipping
- Dry bulk
- Development of dry bulking shipping
- Dry bulk carriers
- Tankers
- Crude oil tankers
- Products tankers
- Chemical tankers
- Gas tankers
- Combination carriers
3Commercial Shipping (M06)
- World seaborne trade -- bulk (2006)
- Wet bulk
- Crude oil 2 billion tons Petroleum products
0.67 billion tons - In terms of ton-mile
- Crude oil 9516 petroleum products 2635
12151 billions of ton-mile - Dry bulk
- Iron ore 716m, coal 728m, grain 281m,
bauxite/alumina 72m, rock phosphate 31m, - In terms of ton-mile
- Five main dry bulk (iron ore, coal, grain,
bauxite/alumina, and rock phosphate) 9341
billions of ton-mile -
4Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Bulk shipping
- Trends in bulk carriers
- larger size tankers for carriage of crude oil
- design features that reduce pollution of the
ocean by the bulk cargo - large scale development of specialised carriers
such as liquefied natural gas (LNG ships)
5Commercial Shipping (M06)
- World bulk fleet (in thousands of dwt)
- Deliveries of new ship in 2006
- Oil tankers 24.7 m dwt, 322 ships, average
size of 76,578 dwt - Dry bulk carriers 25.2 m dwt, 310 ships,
average size of 81,260 dwt
6Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Development of dry bulk shipping
- Early bulk shipping (using general cargo ships)
prior to 1960s - In the 1960s a number of factors produced the
impetus that led to the present day bulk carrier - Costs of handling cargoes rose, leading to more
intensive capital investment. - Economies (Japan, Germany and USA) increased
rapidly, leading to a corresponding increase in
demand for raw materials. - New ports and the deepening of old ports,
especially in Japan, Europe and exporting
countries like Australia and Brazil, enabled
larger ships to be handled. - Unitisation of general cargo led to the
specialisation of ships and handling facilities,
making obsolete a large percentage of the
traditional general cargo fleet.
7Commercial Shipping (M06)
8Commercial Shipping (M06)
- World steel trade (production 1.24 bt,
consumption 1.113 bt, 2006) -
9Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Dry bulk carriers
- Bulk carriers vary greatly in size and level of
sophistication (up to 250,000 dwt), gearless vs.
sophisticated gears - Key features
- single-deck ships with a double bottom, vertical
cargo access through hatches in the weatherdeck
with a speed of 13 to 16 knots - large cubic capacity, ease of access to the
holds, and cargo handling gears - self-trimming holds the topside wing tanks are
sloped so that granular cargoes can be loaded by
gravity without having to trim the cargo out into
the wings of the hold
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11Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Dry bulk carriers
- A large proportion of bulk carriers do not need
to carry cargo-handling equipment because they
trade between special terminals which have
particular equipment for loading and unloading
bulk commodities. - Cargo handling gear is normally fitted to smaller
bulk carriers since they are more likely to
operate into ports with inadequate shore based
facilities. Cargo handling gear does increase the
flexibility of a vessel, though, and for this
reason it is sometimes fitted even to larger
vessels.
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13Commercial Shipping (M06)
- 66,000 dwt Panamax bulk carrier
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- Dry bulk carrier
- The size of dry bulk carriers will depend more or
less on a trade-off between three factors - economies of scale
- the parcel sizes in which cargo is available
- available port draught and cargo handling
facilities - Unlike the oil tanker, a bulk carrier must enter
a port to be loaded or unloaded.
15Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Three main bulk carrier sizes
- Handy size
- 10,000 to 35,000 dwt, or Handymax 35,000 to
50,000 dwt - flexible in trades where parcel size and draft
restrictions demand small ships (at 10 metres
draught, they are capable of entering most ports)
- carry minor bulks and smaller parcels of major
bulks - old ships (70 of the fleet is over 15 years old)
- shrinking fleet as whole is shrinking (in 2000,
there were 2457 ships between 10,000 and 35,000
dwt and 1327 ships between 35,000 and 50,000 dwt)
16Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Three main bulk carrier sizes
- Panamax
- 55,000 70,000 dwt (a beam of 32 metres to be
able to cross the Panama Canal) - most panamaxes are gearless (panamaxes with 25
ton gear have a niche market) - carry five major dry bulk cargoes, and the larger
minor bulk parcels - increasing in number of ships (1016 panamax ships
with a capacity of 68.5 million dwt in 2000)
17Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Three main bulk carrier sizes
- Capesize
- 100,000 to 300,000 dwt
- gearless
- carry iron ore and coal trades for long hauls
18Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Operation of bulk carriers
- Substantial cost savings are achieved by using
larger vessels. However, the use of big ships is
not always possible and they face two important
restrictions - the maximum size of delivery that an industry is
able or willing to accept at any one time (costs
involved in inventory etc.) - the constraint on ship size imposed by port
draught (or by canals)
19Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Operation of bulk carriers
- Trade-specific issues can have great impacts on
dry bulk market, therefore operations of bulk
carriers. - Natural factors such as drought in Australia can
have strong effects on grain trade therefore bulk
shipping. - Changing trade patterns (length of shipping legs)
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21Commercial Shipping (M06)
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- Tankers
- oil tankers
- crude oil
- products tankers
- chemical tankers
- gas tankers
- LNG (liquefied natural gas)
- LPG (liquefied petroleum gas).
23Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Oil tanker groups
- Oil tankers can be divided into different groups
according to size and usage - handy (1050,000 dwt)
- panamax (5070,000 dwt)
- aframax (70-100,000 dwt) The Aframax class
tanker is largely used in the basins of the Black
Sea, the North Sea, the Caribbean Sea, the China
Sea and the Mediterranean. - suezmax (100200,000 dwt)
- VLCC (200-300,000 dwt)
- ULCC (over 300,000 dwt)
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25Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Crude oil tankers
- From the oil wells in producing countries to
refineries elsewhere in the world. - Loaded on board in its original condition without
any treatment. - It is common that crude oil carriers only call at
offshore loading/discharging facilities - Product tankers
- Product tankers carry oil that has been refined
(range from black oil and diesel to the other end
of the range aviation gasoline). Size is
normally less than 50,000 dwt. - Clean product tankers require special coatings to
protect the steel from the oils corrosive
effects. - Dirty product tankers, transporting denser
products, are equipped with heating equipment, or
heating coils, to keep the product less viscous.
26Commercial Shipping (M06)
27Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Chemical tankers
- Specially designed and built to carry a variety
of liquid cargoes - Much smaller in size than oil tankers due to
small parcels of cargo available - Chemical tankers generally have a number of
tanks, each with its own piping which makes each
cargo self-sustaining - Extremely complex and expensive to build.
- International regulation on the carriage of
dangerous chemicals - The Code for the Construction and Equipment of
Ships Carrying Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk (BCH
Code) came into force in 1972 and was applied on
a voluntary basis by various conscientious
governments such as the U.K., U.S.A., Japan,
Germany and France. - International Code for the Construction and
Equipment of Ships Carrying Dangerous Chemicals
in Bulk (IBC code) was drafted as an amendment to
SOLAS 1974. - MARPOL Annex II entered into force in 1987 and
consequently, is applicable to all vessels.
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- World LNG trade (2,865.3 billion cubic metres)
-
29Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Gas tankers
- The two main types of gas tankers used are
liquefied natural gas (LNG) tankers and liquefied
petroleum gas (LPG) tankers. Carriage of gas
involves both pressure and refrigerated
transportation. A separate inner tank is usually
employed to contain the liquid and this tank is
supported by the outer hull which has a double
bottom. - LNG tankers carry methane and other paraffin
products obtained as a by-product of petroleum
drilling operations. The gas is carried at
atmospheric pressure and at temperatures as low
as -164C in tanks of special materials which can
tolerate the low temperature. - LPG tankers are employed in carrying liquefied
petroleum gases (propane, butane, propane/butane
mix) which are extracted from natural gas. -
30Commercial Shipping (M06)
- Combination carriers
- With all specialised cargo carriers, there is
always a possibility that after discharging its
cargo, the vessel might spend 50 percent of its
employment empty as it ballasts to another area
to pick up another cargo. - Combination carriers are bulk carriers designed
for flexibility of operation and able to
transport any one of several bulk cargoes on any
one voyage e.g. ore or crude oil or any dry and
liquid bulk cargo. - To give greater-flexibility, oil/bulk/ore
carriers (often referred to as OBOs or combined
carriers) are designed to carry a full cargo of
dry bulk such as ore, coal, grain or phosphates,
or a liquid cargo such as crude oil.
31Commercial Shipping (M06)