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15,000 ships to be scrapped by 2032: BIMCO

The long-awaited flood of ship scrap candidates could top most projections, new analysis from BIMCO, the world’s largest shipping organisation, suggests.

Analysts have long been talking up prospects for an avalanche of vintage ships heading for demolition amid a period of growing green regulations and the global merchant fleet getting older and older.

Today, BIMCO has forecast more than 15,000 ships, equivalent to more than 600m dwt, more than a quarter of today’s trading fleet, could be recycled by 2032, up more than 100% on the last 10 years.

Over the past 10 years, 7,780 ships with a deadweight capacity of 285m tonnes were recycled. Most of the deadweight capacity recycled – 60% – was built during the 1990s. In the next 10 years, ships built during the 2000s will be the main source of recycling, according to BIMCO projections, a decade where the global fleet expanded dramatically.

Historically about 50% of bulk, tanker, and container deadweight capacity has been recycled by the time the ships would have been 25 years old and 90% by 30-35 years old. Applying this recycling pattern to the currently trading ships gives BIMCO the 15,000 ship scrap number for the coming decade with the association’s chief shipping analyst Niels Rasmussen suggesting today that many older ships are expected to be recycled earlier than normal due to the ever-tighter limits on greenhouse gas emissions.

Tonnage sent for demolition remained at subdued levels last year, totalling no more than 10m dwt, according to data from broker BRS, the lowest in over a decade and well below the 29m dwt 10-year average.

The average age of the main fleets is increasing with bulkers now at 11.1 years versus 8.7 years five years ago, tankers standing at 11.7 years versus 10.1 five years ago, and containerships at 13.7 years versus 11.4 in 2018, according to Clarksons data from late February. Clarksons estimates that 31% of the current fleet by tonnage would be D or E rated under the recently enacted Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII) assuming recent trading patterns and no changes in speed or the technology status of vessels.

Looking at tankers, the latest data from Braemar shows 20+ year-old ships now represent nearly 8% of the tanker fleet, up from 2.2% in 2019.

The fleet replacement figures are the flipside of the projected scrap numbers, something Asian shipyards are having to consider today. 

Mark Williams, who heads up UK consultancy Shipping Strategy, has urged yards to massively increase capacity to ensure shipping meets its green goals as stipulated by the International Maritime Organization (IMO).

“If the global fleet is to meet the IMO emission ambitions for 2050, then the entire global fleet needs replacing or refitting,” Williams told sister title Splash Extra in a recent article looking at global shipyard capacity. More than 3,500 ships a year need to be built or refitted, every year, until 2050, according to analysis by Shipping Strategy. At its peak in 2010, the global shipbuilding industry was able to churn out 2,700 vessels a year

“Retired and mothballed shipbuilding capacity will have to be brought back onstream by the end of this decade,” Williams said, going on to predict a newbuilding boom that could last for decades.

Sam Chambers

Starting out with the Informa Group in 2000 in Hong Kong, Sam Chambers became editor of Maritime Asia magazine as well as East Asia Editor for the world’s oldest newspaper, Lloyd’s List. In 2005 he pursued a freelance career and wrote for a variety of titles including taking on the role of Asia Editor at Seatrade magazine and China correspondent for Supply Chain Asia. His work has also appeared in The Economist, The New York Times, The Sunday Times and The International Herald Tribune.

Comments

  1. How much green house gas will be emitted if this scale of demolition is largely done by using blow torches/cutters probably in areas with little concern for the impact this may have.

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