CMA CGM

CMA CGM

Coordinates: 43°18′54″N 5°21′58″E / 43.314892°N 5.366006°E / 43.314892; 5.366006

CMA CGM
Founded 1977
Headquarters Marseille, France
Revenue €15.1 billion (2010)
Employees 17,000 (2010)
Website http://www.cma-cgm.com

CMA CGM S.A. is a French container transportation and shipping company, headed by Jacques Saadé. It is the third largest container company in the world, using 200 shipping routes between 400 ports in 150 different countries.[1] Its headquarters are in Marseille,[2] and its North American headquarters are in Norfolk, Virginia, USA.

Contents

History

CMA CGM container loaded on a truck to be delivered to Alexandria port, Egypt

The history of CMA CGM can be traced back to 1851 when Messageries Maritimes (MM) was established. Another component company, Compagnie Générale Maritime (CGM), was founded in 1855 and renamed Compagnie Générale Transatlantique in 1861. The two companies merged to form Compagnie Générale Maritime in 1973 as a French state-run entity.

Jacques Saadé created CMA in 1978 as an intra-Mediterranean liner service. In 1996, CGM was privatized and sold to Compagnie Maritime d'Affrètement (CMA) to form CMA CGM.[3]

In 1998 the combined company purchased Australian National Lines (ANL). The company is still growing and has ordered 58 new vessels (owned outright or on long-term leases) to be delivered over the next four years.

Container ship CMA CGM Balzac in the port of Zeebrugge, Belgium

CMA CGM acquired its French rival Delmas based in Le Havre from the Bolloré group in September 2005 for 600 million Euros. The acquisition was completed in early January 5, 2006. The resulting corporation became the third largest container company in the world behind the Danish A.P. Moller-Maersk Group and the Swiss Mediterranean Shipping Company S.A..[4]

Incidents

Piracy

On April 4, 2008, pirates seized the CMA CGM luxury cruise ship "Le Ponant" off the coast of Somalia.

Arms shipments

CMA CGM and its affiliates have been implicated in various arms shipping incidents:

  • March 2011: Israeli forces intercepted the vessel Victoria in international waters in the Mediterranean Sea, stating that it was carrying weapons by Iran via Syria. According to Israeli officials, the arms shipments included “roughly 2,500 mortar shells, nearly 75,000 bullets and six C-704 anti-ship missiles.” Israel says the ultimate destination of the cargo was for the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.[5] CMA CGM, which chartered the vessel, stated, "The ship's manifests do not show any cargo in contravention [of] international regulations, and we do not have any more information at this stage."[6]
  • October 2010: Nigerian authorities seized 13 shipping containers carrying illegal Iranian weaponry at Lagos’ Apapa Port. The containers included 107 mm artillery rockets (Katyushas), explosives and rifle ammunition. The arms were to be shipped next to The Gambia, with the final destination of the cargo possibly the Gaza Strip. The MV CMA CGM Everest originally picked up the containers from the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas. CMA CGM says it was victim of a false cargo declaration, claiming the weapons were shipped in packages labeled as "glass wool and pallets of stone" and that the Iranian shipper "does not appear on any forbidden persons listing."[7]
  • November 2009: South Africa seized arms traveling from North Korea by way of China. The seizure amounted to two containers filled with tank parts and other military equipment from North Korea, which included “gun sights, tracks and other spare parts for T-54 and T-55 tanks and other war material valued at an estimated $750,000.” The military equipment was concealed in containers lined with sacks of rice and shipping documents identified the cargo as spare parts for a “bulldozer.” According to the report, the containers were originally loaded in Dalian, China onto the CMA CGM Musca, a UK-flagged container ship. The shipment was reportedly destined for Point Noire in the Republic of Congo.[8][9]
  • July 2009: The United Arab Emirates seized a shipment of weapons from North Korea destined for Iran. The shipment was made in violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1874, which bans all North Korean Arms exports. The weapons, which included RPGs, detonators, ammunition, and rocket propellant, were shipped by a Bahamian-flagged vessel of ANL Australia, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMA CGM.[10][11]

As a result of CMA CGM's involvement in Iranian weapons smuggling, U.S. congressmen have called on CMA CGM to be investigated and urged the U.S. Treasury Department to consider levying sanctions against the shipper.[12]

Key figures[13] (*teus : twenty-foot equivalent units)
CMA CGM 2008
Total Revenue USD 15,1 billions
Number of containers carried 8.9 million teus*
Total fleet vessel 384
Total fleet capacity 1.1 million teus*
Staff Worldwide 17,000 employees
Staff in France 4,200 employees
World ranking 3rd

Subsidiaries

CMA CGM Tower constructed in Marseille
  • Terminal Link - Container Terminals developer and operator, ranked N°12 worldwide
  • Rail Link (multimodal rail-bound transport solutions)
  • River Shuttle Containers (Rhône – Saône axis containerised river transportation)
  • CMA CGM Logistics (purchase to delivery global carrier)
  • Qualitair & Sea (custom engineering air freight logistics)
  • Progeco (container: sales, leasing & repairing)
  • Australian National Lines ANL (Oceania, Asia, Europe & US trades)
  • COMANAV (Passenger ferry and container services from Morocco to Europe)
  • MacAndrews (Iberian Peninsula shipping and travel industry services)
  • Delmas (Container and RoRo line)
  • OT Africa Line (West Africa container line)
  • CMA CGM Croisières & Tourisme
    • Yacht luxury cruises (64-passenger Ponant, 90-passenger Levant, and 226-passenger Diamant)
    • Trips onboard container carriers
  • Compagnie du Ponant (leading French-flagged cruise company)
  • Tapis Rouge International (luxury travel tour operator)
  • CMA Ships (a wholly owned subsidiary managing all fleet-related operations)
  • Cheng-Lie Navigation Co. Ltd (Intra-Asia Container Line based at Taiwan)

Joint Ventures

  • CMA CGM Systems

Maritime Lines

  • ECS (Europe Caribbean Service)
  • ACSA (Asia Latin America)
  • FAL (Europe Far East Service)
  • NAF (North Africa Service)
  • SAMWAF (Latin America West Africa)

References

  1. ^ "CMA CGM website". http://www.cma-cgm.com. 
  2. ^ "Contact." GMA CGM. Retrieved on 22 September 2011. "CMA CGM Marseille Head Office 4, quai d'Arenc 13235 Marseille cedex 02 France "
  3. ^ Renaud Lecade (2005-07-19). "Touché-coulé chez les frères Saadé" (in french) (reprint). Libération. http://assassinatsdecooperants.ouvaton.org/article.php3?id_article=3353. 
  4. ^ CMA CGM completes the acquisition of Delmas, Jan. 10, 2006, CMA CGM press release.
  5. ^ "Israel unveils seized arms cache from cargo ship". Boston Herald. Associated Press. 16 March 2011. http://www.bostonherald.com/news/international/middle_east/view/20110316israel_unveils_seized_arms_cache_from_cargo_ship/. Retrieved 18 March 2011. 
  6. ^ Bruce Barnard (15 March 2011). "Israeli Commandos Seize CMA CGM Ship in Arms Probe". The Journal of Commerce. http://www.joc.com/maritime/israeli-commandos-seize-cma-cgm-ship-arms-probe. Retrieved 18 March 2011. 
  7. ^ Jon Gambrell (30 October 2010). "Nigeria: Shipper confirms weapons came from Iran". The Boston Globe. Associate Press. http://www.boston.com/news/world/africa/articles/2010/10/30/nigeria_shipper_confirms_weapons_came_from_iran/. Retrieved 18 March 2011. 
  8. ^ Jor Lauria, Gordon Fairclough and Peter Wonacott (26 February 2010). "Pretoria Seized North Korean Weapons". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704479404575087411640791960.html. Retrieved 18 March 2011. 
  9. ^ Edith Lederer (25 February 2010). "South Africa reports NKorea sanctions violation". The Seattle Times. Associated Press. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2011189422_apununnorthkoreasanctions.html. Retrieved 18 March 2011. 
  10. ^ Peter Spiegel and Chip Cummins (31 August 2009). "Cargo of North Korea Matériel Is Seized en Route to Iran". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125151138304468869.html. Retrieved 18 March 2011. 
  11. ^ Joby Warrick (3 December 2009). "Arms smuggling heightens Iran fears". The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/02/AR2009120203923.html. Retrieved 18 March 2011. 
  12. ^ Benjamin Weinthal and Johannes C. Bockenheimer (30 May 2011). "French ship company faces US sanctions for 'Iran ties'". The Jerusalem Post. http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=222910. Retrieved 2 June 2011. 
  13. ^ "Key Figures". CMA CGM. http://www.cma-cgm.com/AboutUs/Presentation/KeyFigures.aspx. 

External links


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