Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Transportation

Schedule reliability improves in March; Maersk still over 50%

Global schedule reliability continues to slowly inch upwards, recording a marginal month-on-month improvement again with the March 2022 figure reaching 35.9%.

Despite being the highest 2022 reliability figure so far, the March score is still slightly below the 2021 level, according to the latest update from Sea-Intelligence.

“The average delay for LATE vessel arrivals declined again, this time by 0.32 days, to 7.26 days in March. Despite the improvement, the average delay figure has now been over 7 days since August 2021, and continues to be the highest across each month when compared historically.”

With a schedule reliability of 50.3 percent, Maersk was the only carrier with a score of over 50 percent, followed by Hamburg Süd with 45.9 percent.

There were seven carriers with schedule reliability of 30-40 percent and five with schedule reliability of 20-30 percent. Wan Hai had the lowest schedule reliability in March 2022 of 22.6 percent.

“On a Y/Y level, only three of the top-14 carriers recorded an improvement in schedule reliability in March 2022 with the largest improvement of just 1.6 percentage points.”

The analysis by Sea-Intelligence overs schedule reliability across 34 different trade lanes and 60+ carriers.

Related posts

FMC Investigates Carriers for Withholding Containers From U.S. Farmers

scceu

Performance Shipping Inc. Reports Financial Results for the Second Quarter and Six Months Ended June 30, 2022

scceu

Baltic index snaps streak of 7 consecutive weekly gains

scceu