Seized Hanjin Shipping Vessel Resumes Operation in South Africa

May 30, 2016

 Hanjin Paradip resume  its sailing from South Africa as talks continue with owner over unpaid charter fees. The ship had been detained in Richards Bay, South Africa earlier last week over unpaid charter fees.

 
The vessel in 82,158 deadweight tonnage (DWT) was used to carry grain and minerals.
 
“We agreed with the ship owner that the normal vessel operation is the most important for interests of the both parties,” Hanjin said, without specifying the owner’s name. “We agreed to resume operation first and decide on the charter fees through additional negotiations.”
 
According to Yonhap, the incident took place while the shipping company has been negotiating with tonnage providers to get rates cut on chartered ships, a crucial first step outlined by bondholders of the financially-troubled company.
 
Hanjin Shipping is one of many Korean maritime-related firms that has been forced to enter restructuring recently on the back of dire financial results.
 
Hanjin operates 95 container ships and 56 bulk carriers, 91 of them chartered by foreign owners.
 

Logistics News

Container Shipping Rates Plunge in Step with U.S. Demand for China Goods

Container Shipping Rates Plunge in Step with U.S. Demand for China Goods

World’s First Ship-to-Ship LCO₂ Transfer Completed in Shanghai

World’s First Ship-to-Ship LCO₂ Transfer Completed in Shanghai

Gulf Shipping Costs Fall After Israel-Iran Ceasefire

Gulf Shipping Costs Fall After Israel-Iran Ceasefire

US Goods Trade Deficit Increased in May, Exports Declined

US Goods Trade Deficit Increased in May, Exports Declined

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Canada passes law to expedite resource projects but faces opposition from Indigenous peoples
Middle East flights suspended by airlines
Hawaiian Airlines cyber-attacked