What is international shipping?
International shippingis a means of transport used for conveying goods (mostly) using sea routes rather than roads (road transport) or air channels (air transport). As, in most cases, its goal is to link two countries separated by a sea or ocean, shipping is by definition international. For several years now,international shippinghas primed itself as being the leading means of transporting goods worldwide.
Globalization and the boom in trade between countries have widely bolstered the success ofsea freight. The main stakeholders ininternational shippingwere able to develop an economical and ever-growing transport offer. Although the very first container carrier models from the 1960s could carry up to 1,700 TEU (Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit), the last generation of container carriers can load up to 20,000 containers.
Responsible for 3% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions,international shippingis currently undergoing a major transformation. Having taken part in the race to gigantism,international shippingstakeholders launched into a race for innovation - aiming to combine their sea transport activity withsustainable developmentgoals. In concrete terms, they endeavored to make this activity less polluting hence its constant development over the years.
Specificities of international shipping
International shippingis appealing to companies wishing to export goods, thanks to:
Transport costs, which are considerably lower than air transport for instance;
Transport capacity (between 5,000 and 10,000 TEU for most container carriers sailing today);
The regularity of maritime activity;
Easy handling.
It should be noted that two main offers can be distinguished in the field ofinternational shipping:
Tramping (or demand responsive transport): the sender requires for a vessel to be made available for transporting their goods from a point A to a point B;
Liner maritime transportation: just like a foot passenger would catch the bus on land to get from A to B, the sender commits their goods to a vessel with a set itinerary and regular ports of call.
Examples and practical applications
It takes about 22 days for a merchant ship to cross from Europe to China, loaded with 15,000 containers. It should be noted that in Europe, the port of Rotterdam is a key destination forinternational shipping(it ranks in the top 10 of all ports worldwide for international trade).
The routes linking the South China Sea to the United States, and Europe to Central America, are two of the most used international maritime routes.
Companies specialized ininternational shippingrely on a fleet of ships well-adapted to the transport of various goods, thanks to their versatile cargo holds, container carriers, bulk carriers, oil tankers or chemical carriers.
International shipping in figures
Sea freightalone represents 90% of all merchandise trading worldwide.
Over 50,000 merchant ships sail across the planet, 40% of which are oil tankers.
Over 60% of the world’s fleet dedicated tointernational shippingsails under a flag of convenience (free choice of the registration country).
International shippingemploys over 1.3 million seamen throughout the world.
(Source:https://info.arte.tv/fr/le-commerce-maritime-mondial-infographies
https://savoirs.rfi.fr/fr/comprendre-enrichir/economie/le-transport-maritime
https://www.planete-energies.com/fr/medias/decryptages/le-transport-du-petrole-par-voie-maritime)
Regulatory cornerstones
Brussels Convention dated 25 August 1924
Hamburg Rules dated 31 March 1978