The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - The Collapse of Global Maritime Shipping || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: February 1, 2024No matter how much bubble wrap and caution tape we slap onto global maritime shipping, the industry has found itself in quite a predicament. Full Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/the-collapse-...of-global-maritime-shipping
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Everybody, Peter Zine here coming to you from a chilly day in Delray Beach, Florida.
Well, chili for Florida. It's like 50.
Today we're going to talk about what's going on in the world of maritime shipping
and why we should be thankful that nothing's gone horribly wrong yet.
And why we should count on that continuing.
Just a quick recap of what's gone down in just the last couple of months.
We've got Ukraine taking accurate pot shots.
I had Russian energy facilities on the Baltic Sea at a place called Oostluga and on the Black Sea at a place called Tuopsa.
And they're gearing up for an over-a-sease kit now.
We've got a drought in Panama, which based on whose numbers you're using, whether you're going by value or tonnage, has reduced the throughput of the Panama Canal by somewhere between one-third and two-thirds.
We've got
Houthis in Yemen
who are taking pot shots at pretty much
every other vessel that happens
to go by them
which has reduced
shipping through the Red Sea
by about 10%
for energy and cargo.
We've got
fresh piracy in places
like Somalia. They've never really gone away
in places like the Gulf of Guinea
or the Strait of Malacca.
And we've got the Chinese
making ever louder noises about wanting to change the security environment in their own neighborhood,
even as the Russians are actively making roughly two-thirds of the Black see a no-go zone.
It's a long list. It's getting longer by the day.
But, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but to this point, there has not been a meaningful break in the old system.
A big part of that is because of the insurance structure,
where every vessel who's sailing anywhere has to get some sort of policy
to ensure both their hull and their cargo.
And while with the ever tightening sanctions on the Russians
because of the Ukraine War, to this point, that system has not been broken.
It has been denied Russian shipping,
but Indian, Chinese, and Russian state companies have stepped in to offer policies,
and so far, none of the ships that have had problems anywhere
have been under one of those policies.
So what has happened is we've got this dual system where we have the normal world where
the Americans and especially the Europeans are providing the insurance for most of the shipping
when you've got this ghost fleet that's developed mostly older vessels that were about
to be decommissioned that have been brought back and given a new lease on life as second-rate
cargo haulers, especially for liquids, where they have a Chinese Indian or Russian insurance
policy. This ghost fleet based on whose numbers you're using, it may be as much as 10% of the
global tanker fleet, and there's also a few bulkers and maybe, maybe, maybe even a few
container ships that are kind of joining its ranks now too. Anything that the Russians can do to keep
things under the table from the point of view of global record keeping and shipping.
Now, what that means is that the risk has been deferred and absorbed by this shadow
organization that has kind of popped up. We're now in a situation where we're kind of in a holding
pattern where we're kind of waiting for like any real actual disruption to happen. So far,
no real country has targeted any sort of shipping. It's not like the Japanese and the Chinese
have tried to block each other. The U.S. is still using its naval power to patrol the oceans
where it can. And the biggest beneficiary of that system is none other than China. And we don't
have the Russians or NATO deliberately target each other's commercial shipping yet. In fact, everyone
is very scrupulously sticking to the old structures. They're just kind of trying to maneuver their
own ways to get national and regional advantages. Now, this isn't going to be long for the world.
This is a very unstable sort of equilibrium that we have reached in early 2024. And the
this is crazy. That ghost fleet is the reason why it's all still working.
It's kind of a testament to the strategic inertia of the system.
But now the buffer, the ghost fleet, is something that is largely documented,
largely under the table.
And if one of these ships gets into trouble, it's an open question of whether or not the U.S. Navy will step into help.
All of these are unknowns, which means as soon as that happens,
a ghost fleet ship gets into trouble or a real country starts taking shots at another country's shipping,
we don't just lose that buffer.
We lose all of the insulation that we've managed to,
build up in the last two years, and we get a very quick breakdown much faster than we would
have otherwise. Now, based on what happens geopolitically, this could all go any number of directions.
If the United States decides to take a shot at what the Iranians are doing in the Gulf,
you know, that obviously takes us one direction. The Chinese decide to do something the South China
Sea, that takes us another. If Ukraine accidentally hits an actual third party vessel in some of its
anti-Russian operations, it goes another. If the Russians board and capture somebody going to a
Ukrainian for that takes another direction. We're on the edge. There's a lot of guns aimed at our heads
right now. And it honestly from my normal point of view, it doesn't really matter which way this
goes. It all leads to the same end place where long range shipping is simply no longer viable.
And shipping in general through dangerous areas is simply no longer viable. And the two biggest
plays in the world that benefit from the current system are ironically Russian sanctions busting
oil exports which have to sail all the way around Eurasia and Chinese merchant
exports who have to do the same thing. Those are the longest haul plays out there,
all going through dangerous zones. So when this cracks, we see those two things get hurt
first, but they will be far from alone. Remember, East Asia is home to half of all manufacturing
supply chain steps. There is no version of manufacturing in the world, especially when it comes
to things like computing and electronics, where it works without that setup.
And that requires global shipping to be safe.
So we need to be prepared for the not too distant future when all of this just stops working.
And we have to figure out a fundamentally new model that's probably going to be more based on regional trade rather than global.
Okay, that's plenty for the day.
Take care.
