During 2020, overall EU maritime traffic dropped by 10.2% as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a statistical overview performed by EMSA.
The report reveals cruise ship traffic was the most heavily impacted, with an 86% drop in traffic compared to 2019. However, journeys by vessels like bulk carriers, chemical tankers, container ships and oil tankers only decreased by approximately 5%.
In addition, EU seaborne trade dropped by 9.3% in 2020, a larger decrease than the global average of 3.6%, and equivalent to a loss of approximately 226 million tonnes of trade handled by EU ports.
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Based on a review of customs data, the most significant decline in maritime trade volumes was in imports into the EU from non-EU countries, which fell by 12.2% in 2020. Shipping trade between EU Member States was also affected by the pandemic, decreasing by 7.1%. Sea-borne exports from the EU to non-EU states experienced a lower decrease of 4.3%.
However, the share of all world trade carried by sea in 2020 increased by three percentage points to 88%, as the effects of the pandemic had a greater impact on other modes of transport like air, road and rail.
Maritime transport has proved its resilience throughout the course of the pandemic, keeping vital supply lines open while the world went into lockdown. Our report shows for the first time the impact that the COVID-19 crisis has had on maritime transport in the EU, and we hope it will inform efforts and decisions at policy level to ensure a full recovery for this vital sector,
…said the Executive Director of EMSA, Maja Markovčić Kostelac.
In shipbuilding section, globally, new vessel orders fell by over 30%, although output was relatively well managed at 85% of 2019 levels. However, EU shipbuilding was more deeply impacted due to its focus on cruise ships, a sector that was heavily impacted by the pandemic.
The reduction in 2020 EU shipbuilding activity was partly related to a drop in deliveries of cruise vessels, which declined by 34% in terms of gross tonnage in 2020 (as compared to a 15% decline globally for all ship types), with new orders of cruise ships down 98% on 2019 (34% globally).
As we focus our efforts on building back better post-pandemic, it is essential for us to have a full picture of the crisis’ impact on strategic industries such as shipping so as to guide our policies and lay the foundations for a full and sustainable recovery,
…noted the EU Commissioner for Transport, Adina Vălean.
Nearly one in every five ships worldwide sails under an EU Member State flag, and the EU accounts for approximately a fifth of all global maritime trade, EMSA data reveal.