We saw them coming up a bit towards the end of the quarter, and then of course, the Red Sea crisis ... which again changed the market."
Rolf Habben Jansen, CEO of Hapag-Lloyd, the world's fifth-largest ocean carrier, tells CNBC he has an improved view on trade for the rest of 2024.
"It's a concerning situation and I think the [Red Sea] outlook is very difficult," Jansen said.
In addition to the added costs, according to Sea-Intelligence, the Red Sea diversions could increase carbon dioxide emissions by 260%–354%.
New ocean alliance with MaerskThe reduction in global freight and schedule reliability are headwinds ocean carriers have been facing for months.
Persons:
Lloyd, Jansen, Rolf Habben Jansen, Hapag Lloyd, Hansen, it's, Lars Østergaard Nielsen, Nielsen, " Hansen
Organizations:
CNBC, Intelligence, EU, Trading, Maersk, Hapag, Gemini, Sea, MSC
Locations:
U.S, Asia, West Coast, East Coast, Gulf Coast, Red, Aden, Yemen, Africa, Europe, Suez, Panama, California