Bangladeshi breakers lead the way, followed closely
by recyclers in Pakistan, but they are bidding on low-quality units with
components already removed, poor steel, corroded ballast tanks and permanent
ballast., according to GMS, the world’s largest cash buyer of end-of-life ships.
Despite this gloomy backdrop, prices
remain firm. The lifting of restrictions on letters of credit has enabled
Bangladeshi recyclers to nail a number of units including two small bulk
carriers, ‘as is’ in Singapore. The 6,537ldt Lian Feng 6, and the 6,003ldt
Yamtai were closed at relatively firm levels – $520 per ldt and $480 per ldt
respectively, GMS said. Meanwhile, the laid-up 2007-built Chinese feeder
container, Far East Cheers, 3,651ldt, was committed at $530 on a delivered basis.
No sales were reported in Pakistan but an easing of
restrictions on letters of credit there too is enabling potential buyers to
offer prices close to those prevailing in Bangladesh, GMS said.
However, a key focus among the
country’s recyclers is the Hong Kong Convention, due to enter force in just 16
months. As a recent signatory, Pakistani yards must upgrade standards and
invest in infrastructure, both to meet HK Convention requirements and to keep
pace with improving standards in India and Bangladesh.
There were no sales in India either.
Following a spate of Hong Kong Convention container ships in January, Alang has
turned into a ‘ghost town’, GMS said, with a shortage of tonnage supply not
seen in decades. This should technically be driving demand and prices, but it
is not.
Stubbornly high inflation is proving
a headache in Turkey as the lira/dollar exchange rate closed the week close to
TRY32. Meanwhile, import and local steel prices declined by about $10 and $5
respectively, GMS said. Recycling yards
in Aliaga must not only contend with the country’s own economic woes, but also
the fact that prices in at least two subcontinent locations remain firm. No
sales were reported in Turkey.
Bangladesh led the league table in
week 10, with indicative prices of $550 for containers, $530 for tankers, and
$510 for bulk carriers. Pakistan breakers were ten dollars behind across the
board, and a weak market in India was theoretically down by a further $20.
Prices prevailing in Turkey were $340, $330, and $320 respectively