The weak consumer demand in the European economies also heralds further woes for the already ailing liner shipping companies: starting already at the end of 2011, the import of laden containers began to develop gradually slower than the export of laden containers, demanding for a higher share of the unprofitable empty repositioning. In 2012, some four million empty TEUs were discharged in the North Range ports, an increase of 13 per cent over 2011. In 2013, ISL and Hackett Associates anticipate that this number will grow by another 14 per cent to 4.5 million.
Different dynamics are expected in the individual North Range ports. Rotterdam and Antwerp are expected to outperform the market average slightly, growing at rates of around 4 % and 3 %, respectively. Hamburg and Le Havre are expected to grow in line with the general market average whilst it is anticipated that the ports of Bremen/Bremerhaven and Zeebrugge are set to miss out on the growth dynamic. Particularly in Bremen/Bremerhaven, which did extraordinarily well in 2011 (+21.0 %) and 2012 (+3.4 %), some of the market shares acquired in the previous years had gotten lost at the turning of 2012/2013, setting the port up for a volume loss between 7 and 8 % compared with the record year 2012.