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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

P&O Nedlloyd
IndustryShipping
Founded1997
Defunct2006
FateTaken over by Maersk Line
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
ServicesContainer transportation
Websitewww.ponl.com

P&O Nedlloyd Container Line Limited was an Anglo-Dutch worldwide ocean-going container shipping line, with dual headquarters in London and Rotterdam. The company was formed in 1997 by the merger of the container-shipping interests of Dutch transportation company Royal Nedlloyd (Nedlloyd Line) and the British maritime shipping giant P&O Group (P&O Containers).

In 2004, Royal Nedlloyd bought the remaining shares from P&O and the company was listed as Royal P&O Nedlloyd on the Dutch stock exchange. Royal P&O Nedlloyd was acquired by the Danish A.P. Moller-Maersk Group (Maersk) in 2005 and was combined with their existing container shipping business Maersk-Sealand to form Maersk Line. As Sealand was the US-based historic innovator of container shipping, Maersk Line subsequently embodies the Dutch, British as well as Danish and American merchant marine legacy.

History

The company, P&O Nedlloyd, a 50/50 joint venture was formed in December 1996; when P&O Containers Limited (formerly OCL), a British shipping giant merged its container-shipping interests with the Dutch container transportation company, Royal Nedlloyd Lines. P&O Nedlloyd was the largest partner in the Grand Alliance, which also included shippings concerns such as OOCL, Hapag Lloyd and NYK Lines.[citation needed]

Expanding in 1998, the line purchased Blue Star Line's container business. The company also acquired the container business of Harrison Line (based in the UK). Further expansion came with the buyout of Farrell Lines (US-based) in 2000.[citation needed]

In 2001, after three years of negotiations, an attempt to make P&O Nedlloyd failed. With Philip Nevill Green at the helm Anglo-Dutch boardroom balancing got a different rational and in April 2004 Royal Nedlloyd purchased the 25% shares of P&O Nedlloyd from P&O and exchange the remain 25% shares holds by P&O with 25% shares of the newly formed listed company, makes Royal Nedlloyd is the major shares holder.[1]

The company was listed on the Euronext Amsterdam as Royal P&O Nedlloyd NV. By the end of 2003 Royal P&O Nedlloyd was operating its worldwide business according to standardised global processes and a single IT application called 'FOCUS', which included all commercial, operational as well as financial activities.[citation needed]

In May 2005 Maersk announced plans to purchase P&O Nedlloyd[2] for 2.3 billion euros.[3] At the time of the acquisition, P&O Nedlloyd had 6% of the global industry market share, and Maersk-Sealand had 12%. The combined company would be about 18% of world market share. Maersk completed the buyout of the company on 13 August 2005, Royal P&O Nedlloyd shares terminated trading on 5 September. In February 2006, the new combined entity adopted the name[citation needed] "Mærsk Line". At the time the company was folded into A.P. Moller, it owned and chartered a fleet of over 160 vessels. Its container fleet, consisting of owned and leased vessels, had a capacity of 635,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU). Royal P&O Nedlloyd N.V. had 13,000 employees in 146 countries.[citation needed]

By the end of 2006, Maersk global market share had fallen from 18.2% to 16.8%, at the same time, the next two largest carriers increased their market share, MSC went from 8.6% to 9.5% and CMA CGM from 5.6% to 6.5%.[4][5][6] In January 2008, Maersk Line announced drastic reorganisational measures.[7]

Three years after the take over of P&O Nedlloyd the Maersk Line corporate streamline strategy, based on the Lean Six Sigma process excellence principles, is following the best practices of the P&O Nedlloyd legacy, which at the time of its take over already had a system of globally standardised business processes and one single IT application to support this.

Common consensus within the industry viewed that the desire of the P&O Nedlloyd board to maximise personal capital and thus consolidate the company's needs based within the desires of what the market required in the mid 2000's culminated in the jettison of one the Country's most recognizable and most famous company brands as being a source of great disappointment. It was privately noted that at the time The Queen and other members of the British Royal family were concerned by the impact this would have on the United kingdom's Merchant Navy at the time[citation needed]

Heritage

Items of P&O Nedlloyd and its predecessors' historical heritage are displayed at both the Maritime Museum Rotterdam and the National Maritime Museum in London.[citation needed]

Gallery

References

Notes

  1. ^ MacAlister, Terry (3 February 2004). "P&O casts off container unit". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  2. ^ MacAlister, Terry (10 May 2005). "Maersk and Nedlloyd in bid talks". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  3. ^ "Nedlloyd/Maersk News". Archived from the original on 10 March 2008. Retrieved 9 January 2008. Notes of the P&O Nedlloyd shareholder meeting 27 July 2005
  4. ^ Urquhart, Donald.[citation needed] "Maersk Line's market share declines in 2006" Archived 11 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine - The Business Times - Marshall Cavendish - 29 January 07
  5. ^ "Liner Shipping Report"[permanent dead link] - AXS-Alphaliner - January 2007 - (Adobe Acrobat *.PDF document)
  6. ^ Kennedy, Frank. "Shipowners order new vessels worth record $105.5b in 2006" Archived 18 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine - Gulf News - 12/02/2007
  7. ^ "Maersk Line chief defends restructuring: Business News - MSN Money". Archived from the original on 12 March 2008. Retrieved 9 January 2008. Interview with CEO December 2007

Bibliography

  • Pollak, Richard (2004). The Colombo Bay. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 074320073X.

External links

This page was last edited on 26 June 2023, at 21:19
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