About European shipowners
The European Community Shipowners’ Associations (ECSA) is the voice of European shipowners and promotes the interests of 21 member associations of the EU and Norway. ECSA strives for a regulatory environment that fosters the international competitiveness of European shipping.
The European shipping fleet in numbers
More than 4000 companies make up European shipowners, the vast majority of which are SME’s with ten vessels or fewer in their portfolio. In total, European shipowners control more than 22.000 vessels with a total gross tonnage of 543 million. That is equivalent to 35% of the entire global shipping fleet.
Broken down by segment, European shipowners control 35.7% of the global tanker fleet, 27.1% of bulk carriers, 36.3% of container vessels, 18.7% of specialised ships and 23.9% of non-cargo carriers. The European shipping fleet grows steadily with 1-2% a year, but it is still losing out globally – in particular to China. As such, the EU’s share of the global shipping fleet has decreased from nearly 40% to 35% since 2018.
The economic value of shipping for Europe
European economies depend on trade to a far greater extent than global competitors. As such, the trade to GDP ratio (a measure of an economy’s dependency on trade) for the EU is 106%, while both China (38%) and the USA (27%) are far lower. 76% of European external trade and almost 30% of intra-EU trade is carried out by shipping.
The total turnover of the European shipping sector in 2023 was 183 billion euros, and the economic impact was 127.8 billion euros. In 2021 (latest numbers), almost 1.5 million people were employed in and due to shipping – a sharp increase from previous years.
Read the full study ‘the economic value of the European shipping sector’ by CE Delft
Download the infographic The economic value of the European shipping sector
What we talk about when we talk about shipping
Shipping is not just shipping. There are great variations between vessel types, business models, functionalities, specificities and much more. Take liner and tramp shipping: Liners follow a fixed itinerary giving both operators and costumers predictability. Tramp services do not have a fixed schedule or route and is even available at a short notice providing great flexibility for costumers – but also unpredictability for the operator. Below you can find some of the main characteristics of the different segments to help you understand what we talk about when we talk about shipping.
Download the infographic Shipping’s segments What we talk about when we talk about shipping