The global ship
recycling market is moving into a more difficult quarter, with rising costs,
rising steel prices, possible slowdown in local steel demand, energy shortages
and exchange risks. Even within the Indian sub-continent these parameters can
have differing impacts. As of today, Bangladesh and Pakistan hold firmer ground
in terms of prices offered for recycling candidates, according to leading
vessel cash buyer Wirana Shipping’s latest demo market report.
Wirana’s industry report points to a market that is
becoming harder to read and harder to time. Steel and scrap indicators are
improving across key destinations, but that strength is not flowing evenly into
offers to recycling candidates. For shipowners, that means the gap between
headline market sentiment and actual executable prices may widen but thanks to
slower supply of recycling candidates that ship owners end up getting higher
prices than market indications because there will always be some
buyers who may decide to speculate to offer higher than current prices. In India, recyclers are still offering the
lowest price levels in the subcontinent even as local steel plate prices, local
scrap prices and imported scrap prices have all moved higher. At the same time,
energy shortages affecting steel mills have slowed local steel demand and added
fresh pressure to sentiment. A partial relaxation of LPG supply to the steel
sector may help, but the impact on Alang will depend on how supply conditions
develop on the ground this week.
Bangladesh and
Pakistan are showing firmer pricing signals. While sentiments of steel mills
remain cautious, recyclers in both markets are in a stronger competitive
position at present. That is leaving India with scale and capability, but
without the pricing strength needed to pull in cleaner candidates in meaningful
numbers.
Mr. Rakesh Khetan,
CEO of Wirana Shipping, said: “The market is not short of
recycling capacity, but the supply of recycling candidates continues to remain
short. India has compliant yards, infrastructure and depth, but owners are
still seeing a clear commercial gap when they compare executable levels across
the subcontinent.
“This is where
market conditions matter. Energy disruption, foreign exchange pressure and
regional instability are feeding directly into demolition values. Ship
recyclers have to factor in these costs in addition to the compliance cost.”
Wirana’s report
shows that certified recycling capacity across South Asia continues to grow.
Bangladesh now has 28 HKC certified facilities, Pakistan has three with more
expected shortly, and India has more than 110 yards holding HKC Statements of
Compliance.
Mr Khetan said: “The industry has invested heavily
in compliance and capacity, but commercial reality also plays a dominant role
in decision making process. If pricing in
India does not
respond fast enough, majority of the ship owners will continue to look
elsewhere, especially now that all the facilities they are looking at are HKC
certified facilities.”
The report also
points to broader geopolitical pressure feeding into the market. India’s
currency has weakened sharply over the past month as the Middle East conflict
continues to affect oil dependent economies. Bangladesh remains exposed through
imported gas, while Turkey is also dealing with rising cost pressure linked to
the same external environment.
At vessel level,
supply remains slow to moderate, with medium sized dry bulk, LPG and offshore
units circulating this week. Looking ahead, weaker LNG charter rates could
bring more candidates into the recycling market, while firm dirty tanker
earnings may continue to delay scrapping in the tanker segment.
Mr Khetan said: “This is becoming a more selective
market. Sellers need to be realistic, buyers need discipline and both sides
need to recognise that volatility is no longer a side issue. It is now central
to demolition strategy.”
Wirana expects the
coming weeks to be critical in showing whether India can recover pricing
momentum, whether post Eid trading in Bangladesh drives stronger activity and
whether Pakistan can maintain its recent firmness. As the second quarter
begins, the ship recycling market is offering more optionality on paper, but
greater complexity in practice.