Shipping companies feel the heat as investors shun coal
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[November 13, 2021] By
Jonathan Saul and Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - Shipping companies that
transport the world's coal are in the crosshairs of some financial
backers who are cleaning up their businesses in the absence of a truly
global drive by nations to renounce the dirtiest fossil fuel.
In a sign of investors taking the initiative, six European firms
collectively representing over 5% of the estimated annual $16 billion
capital financing requirements of the dry bulk industry told Reuters
they were either reducing their exposure to vessels that transport coal
or were considering doing so.
Such carriers - titanic vessels stretching up to 270 metres (885 ft)
long and able to carry hundreds of thousands of tonnes of cargo - are
the cheapest way to transport coal and other commodities like iron ore
and grain in large quantities.
Swiss Re told Reuters that from 2023 it would no longer cover the
transport of thermal coal via reinsurance treaties, where it covers a
portfolio of insurers' policies. It exited the direct insurance of coal
cargoes in 2018.
"There is much more pressure on the insurance companies in terms of ESG,"
said Patrizia Kern-Ferretti, head of marine at Swiss Re Corporate
Solutions, referring to the sustainable investment sphere. "I hear from
brokers they are having difficulty placing coal policies in the
insurance market," she added. "More and more companies are applying
direct guidelines."
Esben Saxbeck Larsen, senior portfolio manager at Denmark's Danica
Pension, said it favoured greener shipping firms as they provided the
best risk/return characteristics. The fund has "close dialogue" with
firms about their ESG strategies.
"If we are uncomfortable with such answers, we will not invest in the
company," he added, without elaborating on the specifics of the
methodology.
Such pressures pose new challenges for the shipping industry, which
hitherto largely hasn't been drawn into the centre of the coal debate by
policymakers and investors focused on production and consumption rather
than transport of the fuel.
Andreas Sohmen-Pao, chairman of BW Group, which operates a diverse fleet
including oil and gas tankers, offshore vessels and dry bulk carriers,
said ESG pressures on investors and banks – capital providers to the
industry – were growing.
"How that plays out in terms of outcome is a different question.
Sometimes, people shun a sector and the returns only get better as
supply moderates," he added.
"Everyone has to do what they think is right. Sometimes, you can have
counter-intuitive effects."
There's good money be made from delivering coal, which broadly accounts
for about 30% of cargo volumes and has hit record prices amid a shortage
of fuel including natural gas to provide the power needed by a global
economy recovering from a pandemic.
And demand beckons for decades to come after major consumers including
China and India failed to join a pact to phase out coal power at U.N.
climate talks being held in Glasgow this week; while Europe and the
United States are retiring coal-fired plants, Asian nations are building
almost 200 more.
Khalid Hashim, managing director of Precious Shipping, one of Thailand's
largest dry cargo ship owners, said investors should target the
consumers and producers of coal.
"All we do is deliver it from the point of origin to the point of
consumption, like a messenger delivering his message," he added. "Coming
after ship owners seems the easy cop-out route as we have no voice."
CAPESIZE CARGOES
The six firms that spoke to Reuters about their coal concerns
collectively own, finance, insure or reinsure more than $1 billion of
capital in the dry bulk industry, based on the estimated value of
shipping assets.
Leading shipping financiers more broadly currently provide close to $290
billion of lending to the industry annually, with capital requirements
for the dry bulk segment accounting for about $16 billion, according to
analyst and Reuters estimates.
The investor pullback, part of a wider shift in the financial industry
away from fossil fuels, threatens to drive up the cost of finance and
insurance for some shipping firms in the dry bulk sector, which carries
close to half of global seaborne cargo volumes.
[to top of second column] |
Bulk carriers are filled with coal for export at Roberts Bank
Superport in Delta, British Columbia, Canada January 15, 2018.
REUTERS/Ben Nelms
London-based specialist asset manager Marine Capital, which owns and operates
shipping assets on behalf of institutional investors, said it anticipated that
funders would not support investments in the largest bulk carriers that
typically carry coal, known as capesize vessels.
"When it comes to small bulk carriers below panamax size the amount of coal they
carry is relatively modest and our experiences suggest that certainly now
institutions would take the view that the relationship with coal is, from their
perspective, de minimis," said Marine Capital CEO Tony Foster.
Tufton Investment Management, another prominent investor in shipping, said it
had been increasingly limiting its exposure to coal carriage, especially thermal
coal, since 2018 by favouring charterers less likely to carry the fuel.
"For example we choose agricultural houses over miners and utilities," said
Paulo Almeida, the chief investment officer.
Separately, at least two major ports are making big shifts; Antwerp has turned
its back on coal, for example, while Peel Ports is redeveloping its former
Hunterston coal import terminal in Scotland to be able to handle offshore wind,
dry docking for ships, aquaculture and the recycling of energy.
'APPLYING LIPSTICK'
Some bulk shipping players are looking to get ahead of the climate curve by
refocusing their businesses away from fossil fuels. Others, who have seen patchy
profits in recent years, are loathe to the turn away from the returns on offer
from coal.
Monaco-based Eneti is in the former camp, and it has shifted entirely out of dry
bulk shipping this year into providing specialist vessels for the offshore wind
sector.
"An important consideration when we exited the dry bulk sector was thermal
coal," managing director David Morant told Reuters, saying trying to clean up
coal transportation was "only applying lipstick".
"As a publicly-listed company, renewable energy through offshore wind is higher
growth, environmentally responsible and attractive to our investor base."
Similarly Purus Marine, which has leading U.S. investment company Entrust Global
as its founding shareholder, says it is focused on more environmentally friendly
ocean industries.
"Our business model is to own vessels and maritime infrastructure involved in
offshore renewable energy, seafood, ferries and the climate-aligned sectors of
industrial shipping," said CEO Julian Proctor.
HIGHER SHIPPING PRICES
The impact of higher prices for shipping coal would be felt most in Asia, which
consumes 80 percent of global coal supply and is more reliant than elsewhere on
coal-fired power.
Even though emissions from burning coal are the single biggest contributor to
climate change, the priority for many developing countries is to provide power
to a rapidly growing population rather than converting to renewable plants.
An abrupt transition from coal would drive up logistics costs for producers and
consumers, said Vuslat Bayoglu, managing director of South African investment
firm Menar, which holds stakes in South African thermal coal, anthracite and
manganese producers.
"The worst-case scenario is to see countries being plunged into darkness and
manufacturing being hit hard, thus heralding a global economic crisis of sort,"
he added. "This would be highly irresponsible, as many countries are crawling
out of long periods of recession and COVID-induced decline."
(Additional reporting by Carolyn Cohn in London and Helen Reid in Johannesburg;
Editing by Simon Webb, Veronica Brown and Pravin Char)
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