marine link image
REGISTER NOW FOR the Port of the Future Conference • 2 Days, 50 Ports • Houston, TX • March 24–25, 2026

Hapag-Lloyd Expects Post-Merger Job Cuts

May 31, 2017

German shipping company Hapag-Lloyd confirmed on Wednesday that it is looking to cut up to 12 percent of its almost 11,000 land-based workforce after completing its merger with Arab peer UASC last week.

 
A spokesman at Hapag-Lloyd's Hamburg headquarters said the job cuts would be made over the next 18 months to two years, confirming a report in Abu Dhabi-based The National newspaper and hints to this effect earlier this year.
 
The company did not say where jobs would be cut. Some 2,100 sea-based jobs would not be affected because vessels would continue to travel, the spokesman said.
 
The two businesses will start to integrate their services in about eight weeks in a process called commercial cut-over, which is due to be concluded by the end of the third quarter.
 
Staff levels would not be cut before then, he said.
 
Further steps entail the inclusion of UASC's transport volumes on Hapag-Lloyd's IT platform and the establishment of a new headquarters for the Middle East region.
 
The spokesman said that labour costs were less important to realising synergies from merging two shipping companies than network and procurement cost savings. Overheads will be cut by merging offices, he said.


(Reporting by Vera Eckert, editing by Susan Fenton)

Logistics News

Argentina Grain Exports Rise From Strong Harvest

Argentina Grain Exports Rise From Strong Harvest

Tanker Bound for Cuba with Fuel Cargo Diverts to Trinidad

Tanker Bound for Cuba with Fuel Cargo Diverts to Trinidad

Independent Port Consultants Announces New Hires

Independent Port Consultants Announces New Hires

US Crude Being Shipped to Asia Via Panama Canal

US Crude Being Shipped to Asia Via Panama Canal

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

US airline CEOs call on Congress to resolve the standoff and pay airport security personnel
Trump asks allies to secure Strait of Hormuz, as Iran promises to increase retaliation
India is seeking passage for other vessels that are stranded in the Strait of Hormuz area after a few have sailed through