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Jérôme OLLIER

The Reunion Island becomes CMA CGM Group's new maritime hub in the Indian Ocean - @cmacgm - 0 views

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    CMA CGM, a leading worldwide shipping Group, presented its new strengthened services offer linking the Reunion Island during the inauguration of the Group's new offices, on Tuesday 26th January. The event took place the day before the inauguration of the New Port Reunion. The Reunion Island now becomes CMA CGM Group's maritime hub in the Indian Ocean.
Jérôme OLLIER

PUTIN Wants Northern Sea Route Hubs - @ShipNews - 0 views

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    PUTIN Wants Northern Sea Route Hubs.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @LatitudePolaire - BARENTS town envisions Arctic hub with link to China - @BarentsNews - 0 views

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    BARENTS town envisions Arctic hub with link to China.
Jérôme OLLIER

Boat carrying migrants sinks off Libya with up to 200 feared dead - @guardian - 0 views

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    Up to 200 bodies have been discovered floating off the coast of one of Libya's main people-smuggling hubs on Thursday.
Jérôme OLLIER

The Worldwide Maritime Network of Container Shipping: Spatial Structure and Regional Dy... - 1 views

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    Port and maritime studies dealing with containerization have observed traffic concentration and dispersion throughout the world. Globalization, intermodal transportation, and technological revolutions in the shipping industry have resulted in both network extension and rationalization. However, lack of precise data on inter-port relations prevent the application of wide network theories to global maritime container networks, which are often examined through case studies of specific firms or regions. This paper presents an analysis of the global liner shipping network in 1996 and 2006, a period of rapid change in port hierarchies and liner service configurations. While it refers to literature on port system development, shipping networks, and port selection, it is one of the only analyses of the properties of the global container shipping network. The paper analyzes the relative position of ports in the global network through indicators of centrality. The results reveal a certain level of robustness in the global shipping network. While transhipment hub flows and gateway flows might slightly shift among nodes in the network, the network properties remain rather stable in terms of the main nodes polarizing the network and the overall structure of the system. Additionally, mapping the changing centrality of ports confirms the impacts of global trade and logistics shifts on the port hierarchy and indicates that changes are predominantly geographic.
Jérôme OLLIER

A Framework for Compiling Quantifications of Marine Biosecurity Risk Factors Associated... - 0 views

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    Globally, movements of commercial vessels can facilitate the spread of marine non-indigenous species (NIS) beyond their current biogeographic ranges. Authorities at potential destination locations employ a number of biosecurity risk assessment strategies to estimate threat levels from potential origin locations, vulnerability levels of specific destination regions, or the consequences of successful establishment of particular NIS species. Among the many factors and processes that have an influence on the probability that NIS will survive transport and establish successfully at new locations, vessel type has been identified as an important risk factor. Different vessel types have different structural and operational characteristics that affect their overall level of marine biosecurity risk. Several recent studies have examined subsets of vessel types or vessel characteristics for their ability to spread NIS. While high-quality information is available via these endeavors, it is fragmented and not readily available as an integrated resource to support biosecurity regulators or other end-users. In this study, we synthesize available empirical data on a wide range of vessel types and characteristics to develop a framework that allows systematic quantification of the relative risk of NIS transfer by common commercial vessel types. We explain our approach for constructing the framework, from selection of key risk factors for inclusion, to selection of which datasets to use for those risk factors. The framework output is a set of risk scores which denote the relative biosecurity risk of common commercial vessel types. To demonstrate a potential application of our framework, we applied the risk scores to vessel visit data for commercial ports around New Zealand and assigned a relative risk level per port based on the arrival frequencies of different vessel types. The resulting per-port risk levels matched closely with the results of a prior benchmark study that employed sta
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