IAPH invites you to a live webinar on 21st of January
Category: WPSP
IAPH-WPSP COVID19 survey : one quarter of ports responding have an increased share of empty container handling
COVID19-related small-scale shocks aggregated over time now impacting shippers and freights in several regional markets
Port of Açu to implement Environmental Ship Index as of 2021
Commencing in 2021, the Port of Açu will implement the Environmental Ship Index (ESI), which rates vessels that exceed the emission standards established by the International Maritime Organization (IMO). Ships that perform better than required by...
LOOP-Ports Final Conference invitation to learn about circular economy activities
IAPH members are welcome to join the WPSP 2020 Award-winning LOOPS-PROJECT closing conference on December 16th. Discover ports research findings on over 200 circular economy activities. Check out the agenda, read the invitation and register here to join Fundacion Valenciaport next week.
IAPH-WPSP Barometer Week 45 – upticks in hinterland delays as well as port storage utilization levels for medicines, foodstuffs and consumer goods
Survey from the world’s ports also indicates a possible restructuring of liner container services, a drop in liquid bulk trading and the continued mothballing of cruise services
High volume vessel calls as a result of blank sailings put pressure on port operations
Post-lockdown traffic added to seasonal tourism and essential roadworks causes delays to cargo and traffic at some ports. Vessel crew changes reported for the first time.
WPSP Survey: ports report regional transshipments on the rise with cargo call volumes flat-lining or falling. Passenger vessel calls remain off the radar
Reports of more high-frequency feeder services to regional ports, whilst many passenger vessel calls remain scrapped
European ports impacted more by reduced cargo vessel calls than other global regions
IAPH-WPSP Port Economic Impact Barometer for Week 19 reports persisting cross-border congestion for some ports, resulting in modal switch away from trucks