
Seatrade to strengthen its fast, direct, dedicated perishables service
The 1,800TEU vessels are
to be built to an SDARI Sealion 1800 BKK design and will have capacity for
about 1,300 20-foot reefer containers.
The order is part of a
larger newbuilding programme, the company said, which
started before the pandemic and involves vessels of similar type and capacity.
Seatrade revealed that
the new ships will be deployed in current and newly developed trades and will
form an integrated part of its Fast, Direct & Dedicated (FDD) sales
concept, which the company has promoted successfully in recent years. Its FDD
services are based on niche trades between ports with dedicated infrastructure
enabling shorter delivery times and seasonal flexibility in volumes.
Specialised reefer services remain an important component of the
food and perishables supply chain
Despite the fact that
the conventional reefer fleet continues to shrink, losing out to the container
sector where vessels often have large numbers of reefer slots, specialised
reefer services remain an important component of the food and perishables
supply chain. This has become increasingly evident through the pandemic, with
container ships delayed for long periods outside ports in many locations, as
well as other hold-ups ashore.
Despite container lines’
encroachment on the reefer sector, Seatrade continues to expand its fleet and
its specialised service network. Last year, the company teamed up the Jamaica
Producers Group in a joint venture to acquire Geest Line, a UK-based company
specialising in perishable and breakbulk trade to and from the UK, Netherlands
and Caribbean.