Pirates operating between the Horn of Africa and the Yemeni coast are active in the Bab Al-Mandab Strait and the Gulf of Aden, between the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean.
Their attacks are lifting the cost of shipping on through the trade route after a series of interceptions by pirates and attempts to seize ocean-going merchant vessels. Al Majalla looks at what is happening in one of the most important sea lanes in the world — and why.
Maritime trade routes through the Middle East are some of the most dangerous in the world and, therefore, the most expensive. And now, the outbreak of Israel’s war on Gaza has sent insurance costs higher on the London market.
The Drewry World Container Index rose an average of 12% for containers shipped by sea via eight waterways on global trade routes leading to Asia, Europe, and North America.
This is the biggest increase in 16 months after price and cost inflation eased throughout 2023, the pace of supply chains was restored, and the supply of semiconductors disrupted between Taiwan and the United States resumed.
It has revived fears that higher shipping costs could erode various attempts worldwide to get inflation down to targets typically around 2.5%. According to Marcus Baker, head of maritime affairs at Marsh Insurance Company, premiums have tripled after increased attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea.
The cost of shipping 40-foot containers from Shanghai to Los Angeles increased by 12% to $2,322. From Rotterdam to China, it is up by 25%, the most significant increase in sea freight cost in three years. But it remains less than it was during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Bloomberg.
Read more: The invisible war in Middle East waterways