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Transportation

Maersk Essen loses 750 containers, still sails for LA

It’s happened again. Hundreds of containers carrying goods such as furniture, fitness equipment and electronics have fallen overboard from a California-bound ship.

This time it was the Maersk Essen en route from Xiamen, China, to the Port of Los Angeles last Saturday when, according to the ocean carrier, the container ship experienced a “rough sea encounter.”

The Danish-flagged Essen, with a capacity of 13,100 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), sails on Maersk’s TP6 Asia-U.S. West Coast service. The Essen “experienced heavy seas during her North Pacific crossing,” Maersk said, “resulting in the loss of approximately 750 containers overboard.”

“All crewmembers are safe and a detailed cargo assessment is ongoing while the vessel continues on her journey,” Maersk said in its brief media release issued Wednesday.

It is unclear when the Maersk Essen will berth at the Port of LA. Some reports had it arriving as early as Friday, but San Pedro Bay is filled with container ships waiting to berth and port congestion apparently is worsening. The Los Angeles Times reported that 45 vessels were anchored outside the ports of LA and Long Beach on Tuesday. That’s up double digits from the 32 at anchor a week earlier. 

And it could be weeks before it is known what was inside the 750 containers that went overboard — as well as the dozens of others that could have been damaged on deck. FreightWaves, however, has visibility to what the Maersk Essen was carrying when it sailed from Xiamen.

According to FreightWaves’ SONAR data, the Essen was carrying more than 4,000 TEUs of furniture. Also on board were nearly 850 TEUs of footwear and some 170 TEUs of electronics. Other listed products included tires totaling 150 TEUs and 79 TEUs of kitchenware. Fitness equipment at 82 TEUs does not include 52 TEUs of “smart treadmill[s] with auto incline.” 

Henry Byers, FreightWaves’ maritime market expert, also identified U.S. importers who have utilized the TP6 Asia-U.S. service to the Port of Los Angeles so far in 2021. Since many U.S. importers with larger volumes utilize service contracts directly with Maersk and MSC (members of the 2M Alliance) by looking into the last three vessels that performed this service routing, FreightWaves has insight into which importers were most likely to have freight on board the Maersk Essen. In examining the ocean bills of lading registered with U.S. Customs that arrived on the last three vessels (Maersk Esmeraldas, Maersk Edirne and the MSC Francesca) to call the Port of Los Angeles via the TP6 Asia-U.S. service, FreightWaves was able to determine that the largest volume (named) importers were Amazon, Ikea, Williams-Sonoma, Wolverine World Wide, Levi Strauss, Yokohama Tire, and athletic-wear companies Adidas and Puma.

On board these last three vessels were also many NVOCCs listed as providing ocean transportation via the Maersk Essen on behalf of various U.S. importers. The NVOCCs handling the largest amount of volume on this service so far in 2021 include Topocean Consolidation Service, DHL Global Forwarding, De Well Container Shipping, Apex Maritime and DSV, according to the FreightWaves data. 

Byers also was able to provide insight into the massive container loss from the ONE Apus in late November.

In one of the single worst cases of container losses on record, the ONE Apus lost 1,816 TEUs overboard Nov. 30 en route from Yantian, China, to the Port of Long Beach. That incident also was blamed on stormy seas in the North Pacific. But the Apus did not continue its journey to the West Coast. Instead, it turned around and sailed for Kobe, Japan, where today offloading, inspections and an accident investigation continue. 

According to data provided by Byers, top importers using ONE as their ocean carrier into Long Beach who also use Maersk into LA include Kuehne + Nagel and C.H. Robinson.

Byers noted that even though the Essen is a Maersk vessel, because of vessel-sharing agreements, MSC and Hamburg Sud also are listed as the container ship’s ocean carriers registered through U.S. Customs.

ONE Apus container loss shows need for ‘real-time information’

Storm-beaten ONE Apus berths in Japan

Fireworks among dangerous goods lost from ONE Apus

Click here for more American Shipper/FreightWaves stories by Senior Editor Kim Link-Wills.

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