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Svensk Sjöfarts Tidning
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Short Sea Shipping

Scandinavian Shipping Gazette
January 28, 2005

Editorial:The Baltic perspective. Some 90 million people live in the regions around the Baltic Sea. The area includes two metropolises: St Petersburg and Berlin and environs, both with about five million inhabitants.
The countries have a considerable difference in GNP per capita. The economies in the former Eastern block nations are growing rapidly, even if there is still a long and hard way to go before the level of the Western countries is reached.

 

SSG 2 2005

No repeat performance is likely. Wet and dry bulk owners must be wondering if 2005 will present anything like the earnings opportunities which prevailed last year, when the market was better than even the most optimistic operators had hoped for. We are unlikely to get a repeat performance this year, not least because new tonnage supply in both wet and dry will exceed expected demand by a good margin.   Elegant North Sea liner
ended up as scrap in Turkey
. On the 18th of October 1965 Princess Christina named a newbuilding for Svenska Lloyd at the Lindholmen Shipyard in Gothenburg. The vessel was M/S Saga, which was designed for trade between Gothenburg and Hull.


Special feature: Short Sea Shipping

“Meonia”, Swedish-owned but Cyprus-flagged, discharging timer at Garrucha, Spain, from Lake Vänern, and taking salt back to Bergen. PHOTO: DAG BAKKA JR

Brighter prospects for shortsea. The shipping boom of 2004 has been reflected by a noticeable upturn of the European shortsea market.

“A growing demand for cars in Russia.”

Few ports in the car trade.
In Finland there are only a few ports involved in the import of new cars. The largest is Hanko (Hangö in Swedish), which handled more than 270,000 new cars last year.

 

Change of generation in distribution system.

Weserport sees prospects with short-sea container hub.

NMC –a too steep learning curve.

From sea to road.

Baltic cars from mainland to the sea.

Car importers prefer their own services.

Improved co-operation within Baltic icebreaking.

icebreaking
PHOTO: PERTTI ENBERG

Also in this issue: News review, Market reports, IT & Communication, Safety and Security, Technical News, Fleet News, Market Reports and Finance & Insurance.

Next english issue, IT & Communication, is due February 25, 2005.

Latest update 18-10-2006 8:49

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No 24/2008
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