MSC announces takeover of HHLA terminal group
14 September 2023
Hamburger Hafen und
Logistik (HHLA), a primary German terminal group present mainly in the port of
Hamburg, has announced the intention of the MSC Group to launch a takeover bid
for 49,9% of its own listed shares, while the remaining 50.1% will stay in the
hands of HGV, a company controlled by Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg (FHH).
The German company is
also present in Italy with HHLA Plt Italy in Trieste, where MSC already
controls the Trieste Marine Terminal.
The Aponte
family-controlled Mediterranean Shipping Co (MSC), owners of the world’s
largest container line, already has a large and consolidated presence in
Europe, especially in the Belgian port of Antwerp. This new strategic acquisition
would encompass the whole HHLA group, including its rail logistics affiliates,
Hamburg terminals, and container terminal assets located outside of Germany, in
Tallinn-Muuga, Odesa and Trieste.
The financial operation
is accompanied by MSC’s commitment to ensure the economic revival of the Port
of Hamburg both in terms of employment and throughput, the relocation of its
German liner shipping headquarters from Bremen to Hamburg, and the shift of the
German centre of MSC Cruises from Munich to Hamburg, highlighting the long-term
commitment of MSC to further strengthening the city’s position as a hub for
maritime and logistics activities.
Earlier this year, HHLA
made headlines by selling a stake in one of its three terminals in Hamburg port
to the Chinese shipping firm Cosco. China is currently Germany’s and the Port
of Hamburg’s largest trading partner, with around 30% of its traffic flowing
between Asia and Europe.
Vertical integration of
shipping lines is a long-standing issue that remains a constant cause of
concern to the union movement. The extension of their operations to port
terminals, logistics, but also air freight and rail raises concerns about
employment and working conditions, fair competition, service quality and
efficiency.
The MSC bid will need
to be approved at a state level, with the executive board of HHLA stating that
it will review and evaluate the offer.
The ETF fully supports
the position expressed by our German union Ver.di: the operation could put the
national maritime strategy at risk, while German seaports secure employment for
around 5.6 million people in Germany, which is reason enough to keep them in
public hands.
The possible decision
could lead Hamburg to fall into the hands of the shipping companies, thus
abandoning a future-proof national port strategy. For these reasons, the union
movement urges the relevant institutions to revise this choice and return to a
common national port strategy, as this is the only way to secure the future of
German seaports and ensure the preservation of jobs, fair working conditions
and the respect of the collective agreement.
Berardina Tommasi,
Policy Officer for
Dockers
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий