TurkishMaritimeNews
Home FAQ RSS Links Site Map Contact Saturday, 25.May.2013, 12:00 (GMT+3)
All News
COLUMNISTS
   » CAHIT ISTIKBAL
   » NILUFER ORAL
   » STEVE PELECANOS
   » SULEYMAN SAVAS
WORLD SHIPPING
SHIPPING NEWS
   » TURKISH STRAITS
   » ENERGY
      » Pipelines
   » CONTAINER
   » PORTS
      » HELLENIC SHIPPING NEWS
   » CRUISE NEWS
   » PILOTAGE&TOWAGE
   » SAFETY&SECURITY
   » Environmental
   » Towage & Salvage
   » NAVY NEWS
   » Fishing
   » TANKERS
   » DRY BULK
SHIPBUILDING
ACCIDENTS
MARKETS
LOGISTICS
DEMOLITION
IMO&EU NEWS
PIRACY
TURKISH PRESS REVIEW
SEA SPORTS
NEWS FROM TURKEY
   » Anatolian Agency
   » Hurriyet Daily News
   » HDAILYNEWS
LLOYD'S LIST
INSIGHT/OPINION
SHIPBROKER REPORTS
Poll
What you expect from freight market in 2013?
Better than 2012.
Worse than 2012.
Continue recovering.
Steady up.
Rapid rise.
None


 
SHIPPING NEWS » PORTS


World's biggest shipping lines freely call at Tokyo Bay ports

World's biggest shipping lines freely call at Tokyo Bay ports

THE world's biggest shipping companies continue to call at Japanese ports having decided that there is no real threat of radiation coming from the wrecked nuclear power plant, reports Bloomberg.


Tuesday, 05.Apr.2011, 01:50 (GMT+3)

THE world's biggest shipping companies continue to call at Japanese ports having decided that there is no real threat of radiation coming from the wrecked nuclear power plant, reports Bloomberg.

Having initially pulled out, Hapag-Lloyd, the world's fourth biggest container shipping line, has resumed calls at Tokyo and Yokohama, meaning that none of the world's 16 biggest container carriers are avoiding the area as some did at first.

Ships still shun a 20-mile exclusion zone around the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant, but that is some 200 miles from Tokyo.

Despite record readings of contaminated water, the UN's International Maritime Organisation IMO said there was no medical basis for restricting shipping and the US Navy said any radiation on ships could be cleaned with soap and water and it isn't harmful to health.

"The bottom line is that people haven't been avoiding Tokyo, they're just being more careful about how they approach it," Citigroup Global Markets analyst Christian Wetherbee told Bloomberg from New York.

Cosco, NYK, MOL, "K" Line and China Shipping said there are no changes to their usual services. Their fleets can carry about 85 million tonnes of cargo including coal, iron ore and grains, according to data from Clarkson Research Services, a unit of the world's largest shipbroker.

 


Read: 3753 Times- Tokyo bay, ports, radiation, -


Rating (Votes: 1)
Add your comment(Existing: 0)  Tell friend  Print

COMMENTS ( 0 Existing)

Related Articles:



Other Articles:
Shanghai experiences robust ship movement growth (Saturday,02.04.2011)
Japan rises from the ruins as transport systems revive (Friday,01.04.2011)
Port of Qinzhou handling capacity to hit 5 million TEU by 2015 (Thursday,31.03.2011)
Hamburg Süd: Port call of “Cap Isabel” in Tokyo cancelled at short notice (Thursday,31.03.2011)
February marks end of Shanghai's 14 months export growth (Wednesday,30.03.2011)
Russia's NCC owners sell stake in Novorossiysk's terminal (Wednesday,30.03.2011)
Reassured cargo ships keep stops in Japan (Tuesday,29.03.2011)
Japanese ports re-open, Sendai airport only takes relief flights (Tuesday,29.03.2011)
Xiamen port refuses MOL Presence a berth over 'abnormal' radiation (Tuesday,29.03.2011)
Rotterdam port posts earnings of US$218 million for 2010 (Sunday,27.03.2011)





Events
May 2013
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
 

News in Pictures


Big Yellow bird taking off as big blue EBBA MAERSK is coming into Port of Rotterdam


Hot News
California ocean terminals to have ship electric plug-ins by January
New terminal of Odessa port will accept first ship in autumn
EU Commission Proposes Upgrade for Key Seaports along Europe’s Coastline
Brazilian congress passes port reform, but president likely to dilute it
China to invest more in Greece
First Polish container terminal joins Port of Rotterdam's InlandLinks
Shanghai International Port Group's container April volume up 3.9pc
Hamburg first quarter box volumes fall 1.4pc to 1.2 million TEU
Long Beach container volume up 12.5pc in April, but LA down 9.5pc
Channel's Haropa triple-port complex voted Best Seaport in Europe

 
Archive Search