Shipping
Port of Los Angeles logs busiest June for cargo on record
Port of Los Angeles logs busiest June for cargo on record
DaChan Bay Terminals adds India service, boosts China-India logistics corridor
DP World to develop Syria's Tartus port under 30-year deal
Port of Long Beach terminal expansion breaks ground
Singapore named top international maritime centre for 12th straight year
North Europe port congestion to persist through 2025 – Xeneta
US sets new tariff rates on 14 countries as it moved deadline to August 1
Hamburg invests €1.1B in port infrastructure expansion
Gemini switches up Asia service amid Europe's port congestion
Global schedule reliability climbed in May despite trade disruptions
Asia-NAWC capacity volatility more than triples
Containers lost at sea up more than double in 2024
Hong Kong launches up to HK$2M bunkering incentive for LNG, methanol
Sea-Intel finds top deep-sea ports among least reliable
Port of NY/NJ tops US cargo port rankings in May
Maersk to resume port calls in Haifa
Ningbo-Zhoushan Port sets H1 container record
Mawani privatizes cargo terminals at 8 Saudi Ports
BIMCO: Stable demand outlook despite market uncertainties
Hapag-Lloyd rebrands SAAM Terminals
Port of Savannah achieves third month of over half-million TEUs
CMA CGM names Esra Bora as new general manager in China
Maersk halts port calls at Haifa citing threat risks
First mega-boxship transits the Suez Canal in 15 months
ONE adds 13,900 TEU vessel to fleet
Freightos: Iran-Israel conflict not impacting freight yet
CMA CGM says shipping activities ‘proceeding as normal’ in the Middle East
Sea-Intel: Niche carriers seizing Transpacific opportunity again
Hong Kong marks first SIMOPS LNG bunkering at Modern Terminals
Tariffs put brake on cargo volume growth at Port of Los Angeles
MPA, NYK Group expand autonomous ship trials
PSA International joins Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation
Chengdu-Shenzhen-Hong Kong rail-sea service launches
Global schedule reliability continues to increase in 2025
Sea-Intel: Major ocean carriers profitability around US$5.9B in Q1 2024
Gebrüder Weiss expands into Thailand
DP World, VIMC Lines launch domestic coastal logistics service
Singapore, France ink enhanced maritime partnership agreement
CMA CGM launches first fully-electric container barge in Vietnam
MSC container ship sinks off India coast
Port of Savannah container trade up 17% in April
DP World to launch US$2.5B logistics infrastructure investment in 2025
Port of Long Beach sees record April, warns of sharp May drop amid tariff impact
Suez Canal introduces rebates to regain containership traffic
CMA CGM warns extended China-US tariffs could disrupt global trade
U.S. slashes ‘de minimis’ tariff on small China parcels to 30%
LA, Long Beach ports warn of continued tariff uncertainty
China-US deescalation may spur early peak season
Yang Ming: US-China trade deal may spur demand, but uncertainty persists
US-China tariff pause offers temporary relief, could fuel another frontloading rush
Transpacific shipping faces capacity cuts as trade war escalates
Houthi ceasefire raises prospect of container traffic returning to Red Sea
Kale Logistics to develop Oman's national port community system
PSA BDP takes majority stake in Mexico’s ED Forwarding
Xeneta: ‘Ships for America Act’ adds more uncertainty to container shipping market
JAFZA marks 40 years with record US$190B in trade
Seafrigo expands multi-modal services to support global expansion
US port fees to have minimal impact on Transpacific niche carriers
Port fo NY/NJ is busiest US port in March
S&P: Liner shipping contributes US$1.1T to U.S. GDP
deugro Thailand delivers critical reactors for sustainable fuel production
Emirates Shipping Line joins World Shipping Council
Japanese shipyards may benefit from US port fees on Chinese vessels
MOL opens office in Washington, D.C.
Red Sea disruptions push shipping carbon emissions to record high in 2024
Port of LA expects a double-digit volume decline in the second half amid tariffs
DP World sources 65% of its electricity from renewables in 2024
Hapag-Lloyd: 30% of China’s US-bound shipments canceled
Port of Antwerp-Bruges says impact of US tariffs minimal for now
COSCO says planned US port fees threaten shipping, global supply chains
Yang Ming extends lease at Kaohsiung Port, acquires new containers
Transpacific sees surge in blank sailings amid escalating tariffs
BIMCO, MINING COMPANIES CALL FOR SUPPLY CHAIN DIGITALISATION
December 14, 2023

BIMCO, one of the largest international shipping associations representing shipowners, and four of the world's largest mining companies, Anglo American, BHP, Rio Tinto and Vale, have published a position paper proposing solutions aimed to accelerate the adoption of digital technologies across the metals and mining supply chain.

 

In a statement, BIMCO noted that an estimated 4 billion trade documents are in circulation around the world at any given time, increasing costs, delays and risk of errors.

 

It added that the four mining companies have formed a working group, the Metals and Mining Digitalization Forum (MMDF), and, with the support of BIMCO, aim to engage all parties involved in the digitalisation of trade, from solution providers to legislators, in an initiative to break down the barriers to a digital future.

 

"The position paper outlines the progress made so far in digitalising the metals and mining trade, highlights the barriers that MMDF members are facing in achieving full end-to-end digitalisation, and describes the significant benefits to the industries and thereby the global economy if trade digitalisation is achieved," the international shipping association said.

 

BIMCO noted that the economic benefits of trade digitalisation are unmistakable.

 

Citing a report by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), it added that the estimated 4 billion trade documents in circulation, if stacked on each other, would be 520,000 meters high and constitute about half a million trees, testifying to the fact that paperless trade reduces the carbon footprint of trade.

 

"Manual paper-based processes are a source of cost, delay, error, inefficiency and risk. One research report shows that these inefficiencies contribute to a staggering US$507 billion of working capital trapped in S&P 1500 supply chains alone," said Grant Hunter, director of Standards, Innovation and Research at BIMCO.

 

He added that often, legal uncertainty, interoperability of various platforms and the lack of comprehensive standards are cited by industry stakeholders as barriers and challenges that need to be resolved.

 

"As a working group, the MMDF aims to bring forth the next wave of digitalisation at speed, drawing on insights and synergies from all stakeholders to advocate for a conducive environment and greater adoption of digital tools," the mining majors said in a joint statement.

 

BIMCO said global events such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the disruption of shipping and supply chains due to lockdowns, lost paper documents, and errors clearly highlight the need for change.

 

It added that over the past decade, each of the founding members of the MMDF has invested in digital transformation within mining processes, operations and supply chains.

 

"At the forefront of trade digitalisation, the founding members have carried out landmark digital-first transactions."

 

Focus on Electronic Bill of Lading (eBL)

 

The statement added that an area of initial focus is the Electronic Bill of Lading (eBL), which is gaining traction in the iron ore trade.

 

BIMCO noted that MMDF members together account for around 1 billion tonnes of iron ore shipped on average per year.

 

Between 2021 and 2022, these mining companies contributed to an increase in the amount of iron ore carried on eBLs by 80%, equivalent to 100 million tonnes of cargo. eBLs now account for more than 20% of their annual trade volumes for iron ore.

 

BIMCO said in March 2023, BIMCO launched its "25 by 25 pledge", where shippers commit to target moving 25% of their annual seaborne trade volume for at least one commodity on eBLs by 2025.

 

Anglo-American, BHP, Rio Tinto and Vale have all supported the pledge.

 

"Their signing up is yet another testament to their resolve to digitalise the end-to-end global trade process," Hunter said.