A positive trend of stabilization first reported in August is shown in the October Neptune Indicator, which reports further improvement of the situation.
The latest Indicator shows that the number of seafarers onboard vessels beyond the expiry of their contract has decreased from 8.9% to 7.9% in the last month.
Similarly, the number of seafarers onboard vessels for over 11 months has slightly decreased from 1.2% to 1.0%. The October Indicator also sheds encouraging light on seafarer vaccinations picking up pace. The percentage from the past month is up from 21.9% to 31.1% of vaccinated seafarers from the sample.
This increase in the number of vaccinated seafarers rose from 6.6 percentage points between August and September to 9.2 percentage points in the last month, suggesting that seafarers are gaining increasing access to vaccines. These numbers are still lagging behind the rates of many large shipowning nations, the European Union, or the US.
It is encouraging to see the vaccination rate for seafarers going up and the number of seafarers onboard their vessels beyond the expiry of contracts is decreasing slightly. However, lockdowns, flight cancellations, and travel restrictions persist, thus posing continued challenges to crew changes globally
says Kasper Søgaard, Managing Director, Head of Institutional Strategy and Development, Global Maritime Forum
However, the crew change crisis is far from over as ship managers still report difficulties in securing vaccines and carrying out crew changes.
Continued lockdowns, strict crew change requirements, flight cancellations, and high infection rates still pose the same challenges in on- and off-boarding crew that the industry has been grappling with since the start of the pandemic. Ship managers also continue to report travel bans and restrictions for certain geographies, challenging crew supply from those countries. Issues were also cited with the approval of specific vaccines and of vaccines where both doses were received in different locations
says the indicator.
Finally, a shortage of crew was first reported last month and this arose again as a difficulty that the ship managers have faced. Due to continued lockdowns, seafarer academies have been closed or operating remotely which has delayed the training of seafarers and lockdowns and travel bans have also impacted crew supply.