Drewry: Ship and container reliability decline for third quarter in a row

Containership reliability dipped below 70% for the first time since the beginning of 2012, according to Drewry’s “Carrier Performance Insight”

Drewry’s “Carrier Performance Insight” report, just published, revealed a disappointing drop in performance for both ship-level and container-level reliability Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) in the third quarter. Containership reliability dipped below 70% for the first time since the beginning of 2012 as weaker performances in the Asia trades to and from Europe and the Middle East/Indian Subcontinent contributed to a quarter-on-quarter decline of 1.4 percentage points to 69.5%.

The latest result represents the third consecutive quarterly drop in average on-time performance and is the lowest score since 3Q11 (61.1%). Compared to the same quarter in 2012, the 3Q13 result was down by 1.5 points. Data derived from e-commerce platform provider CargoSmart reveals that while shipments from the origin port were no worse than in the second quarter the delays in cargo availability at destination port were caused by lengthier than scheduled transit times at sea.

“Heading into the slower winter season carriers have already announced a raft of missed or cancelled voyages along with other service adjustments during the fourth quarter, which does not bode well for improvement in the short-term,” says Simon Heaney, research manager at Drewry. “Reliability in the container shipping arena is on a worrying downwards trend having made huge strides in the last couple of years. While carriers are rightfully looking to cut costs they need to keep focus on delivering the service their customers demand.”

www.drewry.co.uk

Quelle: LogEastics
Portal: www.logistik-express.com

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