COSCO will send 5 ships on Northern Sea Route in 2016

By Atle Staalesen, The Independent Barents Observer October 11, 2016
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COSCO Vice President Ding Nong speaks at the Arctic Circle conference in Reykjavik. (Atle Staalesen / The Barents Observer)
COSCO Vice President Ding Nong speaks at the Arctic Circle conference in Reykjavik. (Atle Staalesen / The Barents Observer)

Speaking at the Arctic Circle conference in Reykjavik, China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO) Executive Vice President Ding Nong confirmed that his company’s operations along the Russian Arctic coast in 2016 are reaching a record high.

In the course of this year’s shipping season, the company will send a total of five vessel transit along the Northern Sea Route, which stretches from the Novaya Zemlya to the Bering Strait. It is the biggest number ever by the company.

Four of the vessels are low-ice class ships. The fifth vessel, the Yongsheng, has Arc 4 classification, and made a two-way tour along the route, according to information provided by a COSCO representative.

The other vessels, the Tianxi, Xianghekou, Xiangyunkuo, and Xiazhiyan, made one-way voyages. The first two are cargo vessels, while last ones are heavy lift ships.

Mr. Ding Nong delivered his presentation in Chinese, but provided a set of slides with English explanations.

It is the third year that the Yongsheng makes a transit voyages along the NSR. The first passage was made in 2013 when the ship made it from Chinese Taicang Port to Rotterdam. It became the first Chinese merchant ship crossing the sea route. Two years later, the ship made a two-way voyage across the route.

“As the climate becomes warmer and polar ice melts faster, the Northeast Passage has appeared as a new trunk route connecting Asia and Europe,” Nong said in his presentation.

“COSCO Shipping is optimistic about the future of the NSR and Arctic shipping,” the presentation of the company representative reads.

COSCO is state-owned and among the biggest shipping companies in the world. It has about 130 vessels.

Transit shipments along the NSR have shrunk considerably in recent years. After transit shipments of 1.35 million tons in 2012, volumes dropped to only 40,000 tons in 2015.

By mid-September 2016, transit shipments along the route amounted to 208,500 tons of cargo.