ONLY 45 dry bulk ships were recycled between
January and August 2024 – a 42 per cent drop year on year and the second-lowest
level in 16 years, according to trade group Bimco.
A
report released by the international organisation for shipowners, charterers, shipbrokers
and agents on Wednesday (Sep 18) pointed out that the total capacity of
scrapped dry bulk ships in the period was 2.5 million deadweight tonnes, or
only 0.2 per cent of the fleet.
An
ageing fleet may bring challenges to the sector’s decarbonisation.
Bulk ships carry iron ore, coal, grain, salt,
aluminium, copper ore and other dry cargo in huge volumes without packing or
packaging.
“Recycling declined in all segments, with Capesize
and Supramax experiencing the steepest fall, at almost half of last year’s
figures,” said Filipe Gouveia, a shipping analyst at Bimco.
The
trade group classifies the dry bulk fleet – using Clarkson Shipping
Intelligence’s methodology – into segments of Handysize, Supramax, Panamax and
Capesize.
Capesize bulk carriers have a deadweight tonnage of
over 100,000; Panamax carriers have a deadweight tonnage of 70,000 to 100,000;
Supramax carriers, 45,000 to 70,000; and Handysize, 10,000 to 45,000. High
freight rates and robust demand have delayed the recycling of older ships,
noted Gouveia.
“Over the past three years, demand shocks
contributed to stronger-than-anticipated demand. Sanctions on Russian coal as
well as rerouting away from the Red Sea and the Panama Canal all contributed to
increased sailing distances, keeping ships at sea for longer,” added the
analyst.