Ne vous limitez pas aux seuls grands transporteurs avec Marine Online

La numérisation permet de résoudre les difficultés des propriétaires de cargaisons à trouver des navires

SINGAPOUR, le 27 juillet, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Depuis le blocage du canal de Suez, la chaîne d’approvisionnement mondiale se bat aujourd’hui pour trouver des navires pour ses expéditions et pour obtenir un espace à des tarifs exorbitants. Toutefois, les propriétaires de cargaisons ne doivent pas se limiter à leur réseau existant de navires par leurs pratiques traditionnelles consistant à faire appel à des courtiers.

Marine Online est une plateforme efficace permettant aux propriétaires de cargaisons d’affréter des navires adaptés à leurs besoins commerciaux. Les armateurs qui sont à la recherche de cargaisons peuvent également tirer parti du réseau d’armateurs de Marine Online dans le même but. Par-dessus tout, les propriétaires de navires et de cargaisons bénéficient d’une économie de temps et d’argent en effectuant des transactions sur la plateforme de Marine Online. Les parties peuvent être assurées qu’il n’y a pas de coûts cachés – par rapport aux commissions facturées par un courtier dans le processus d’affrètement traditionnel.

Kenny Phua, vice-président du département d’affrètement de Marine Online, a ajouté : « Nous comprenons les difficultés que rencontrent aujourd’hui les propriétaires de cargaisons en raison de la pénurie mondiale d’équipements. Notre plateforme est sans aucun doute une alternative utile pour les propriétaires de navires et de cargaisons. Les expéditeurs qui ont des difficultés à trouver des navires appropriés peuvent faire appel à notre réseau pour combler leurs lacunes en matière d’expédition. Les armateurs peuvent également tirer parti de notre réseau pour rechercher des marchandises, en particulier ceux qui se limitent aux grands transporteurs. Nous sommes convaincus que Marine Online est un moyen efficace d’aider le secteur à maintenir ses opérations sans les taux et les charges exorbitants qui prévalent actuellement. »

La plateforme de Marine Online offre aux propriétaires de navires et de cargaisons la possibilité d’affréter des navires par le biais du marché ou de commandes privées – en fonction de leurs préférences. Les parties sont assurées de transactions sécurisées et transparentes, toutes les communications étant enregistrées sur la plateforme à des fins d’archivage.

À propos de Marine Online (Singapore) Pte Ltd

Marine Online est la première plateforme intégrée à guichet unique au monde spécialisée dans les services maritimes pour le marché mondial. Créée en 2019, elle propose de nombreux services maritimes par le biais de sa plateforme révolutionnaire d’IA et de Big Data aux propriétaires de navires et de cargaisons de la région. Avec son portefeuille composé de 8 principaux services, Marine Online façonne l’avenir du secteur maritime en ayant recours à une technologie de pointe pour créer des opportunités commerciales et des échanges. Pour plus d’informations, visitez marineonline.com

Pour les questions relatives aux médias, veuillez contacter le service des relations avec les médias :

Contact : +65 6571 5888
Email : marketing@marineonline.com

Never Limited To Only Big Carriers With Marine Online

Addressing cargo owners’ difficulties finding vessels with digitalisation

SINGAPORE, July 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Ever since the Suez Canal blockage, the world supply chain today struggles with finding vessels for their consignments and exorbitant rates to secure space. However, cargo owners need not limit themselves to their existing network of vessels by their traditional practices of calling brokers.

Marine Online is an effective platform for cargo owners to charter suitable vessels for their business needs. Shipowners who are on the lookout for cargoes can also leverage Marine Online’s network of cargo owners for the same purpose. Above all, both ship and cargo owners enjoy both time and monetary savings through transacting with Marine Online’s platform. Parties can be assured of zero hidden costs – compared to commissions charged by a broker in the traditional chartering process.

Kenny Phua, Vice President of Marine Online’s chartering department, added “We understand the difficulties cargo owners face today from worldwide equipment shortage. Our platform is definitely a useful alternative for both ship and cargo owners. Shippers having difficulties sourcing for suitable vessels can tap into our network to bridge their consignment gaps. Shipowners can also leverage our network to source for cargo – especially those cargo owners who limit themselves to big carriers. We are confident Marine Online is an effective medium to help the industry sustain their operations sans the prevailing exorbitant rates and loadings.”

Marine Online’s platform offers both ship and cargo owners to charter through market or private orders – subject to their preferences. Parties are assured of secured and seamless transactions with all communications captured in the platform for record purposes.

About Marine Online (Singapore) Pte Ltd

Marine Online is the world’s first one-stop integrated platform specialising in maritime services for the global market. Launched in 2019, it has provided various maritime services through its revolutionary A.I and Big Data enabled platform to regional ship and cargo owners. With its portfolio of 8 major services, Marine Online shapes the future of maritime by using cutting edge technology to create business opportunities and connections. For more information, visit marineonline.com

For media queries, please contact Media Relations:

Contact : +65 6571 5888
Email : marketing@marineonline.com

European Union Urges Resumption of Tunisian Parliament

The European Union on Tuesday stressed the need to preserve democracy and stability in Tunisia following Tunisian President Kais Saied’s suspension of parliament and firing of the country’s prime minister.

“We call for the restoration of institutional stability as soon as possible, and in particular for the resumption of parliamentary activity, respect for fundamental rights and an abstention from all forms of violence,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said in a statement.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had spoken to Saied by telephone and expressed “support for Tunisia’s democracy.”

“I encouraged President Saied to adhere to the principles of democracy and human rights that are the basis of governance in Tunisia and urged him to maintain open dialogue with all political actors and the Tunisian people,” Blinken tweeted.

Saied’s move late Sunday followed weeks of political turbulence in the country – fueled in part by public anger over the government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Saied, a political independent, said he was acting in response to the country’s economic woes and political deadlock and added that the country’s constitution gave him that authority.

Rached Ghannouchi, the parliament speaker and head of the dominant Ennahdha party, called the president’s actions a “coup” and said the legislature would continue its work.

Two other main parties in parliament also called it a coup, which the president rejected.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the Biden administration is concerned about the situation. She told reporters the developments “come as Tunisian authorities are seeking to stabilize their economy, confront a resurgence in the COVID-19 pandemic, and improve living standards for all Tunisians.”

Saied’s announcement drew crowds of demonstrators into the streets of the capital, Tunis, and elsewhere to celebrate, reflecting people’s anger at parliament to address the country’s problems.

There were also protesters outside the parliament building who were against the president’s actions, and clashes took place between the opposing groups.

Tunisian authorities shut down a live broadcast of Qatar’s Al-Jazeera TV, alleging that its correspondent appeared to encourage the small crowd of protesters to chant against the government. The broadcaster reported that its office in the Tunisian capital was sealed shut and that journalists were not being allowed to enter.

Tunisia has struggled economically for years, and along with political challenges, it has dealt with a spike in COVID-19 cases and deaths.

Political analyst Amin Mustafa told VOA that “most Tunisians have been badly hurt by the ongoing economic crisis and high unemployment, so the issue of suspending parliament is not likely to arouse a strong negative reaction.”

The influential Tunisian Federation of Labor declared Monday that it considers “all measures taken by the president to be legal.”

Source: Voice of America

Tunisian Democracy Seen as Vulnerable After President Fires PM and Suspends Parliament

NAIROBI, KENYA – Tunisia’s president, Kais Saied, was accused of staging a coup this week, when he dismissed the prime minister and suspended parliament after violent protests. Clashes between Saied’s supporters, protesters, and police have raised fears that Tunisia’s fragile democracy is under threat.

A nationwide, dusk-to-dawn curfew began in Tunisia Tuesday and no more than three people are allowed to gather in public places.

The move comes two days after Tunisian President Kais Saied fired Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi and suspended parliament for 30 days.

To justify the prime minister’s firing and shutting the parliament, Saied cited Article 80 of the constitution, which he said gave him the power to carry out such a decision.

Opponents are calling that decision a coup.

Marc Owen Jones, a professor at Qatar’s Hamad bin Khalifa University, told VOA the president planned this moment for months.

“This policy or what he is doing reflects the content of a document that was leaked back in May that basically suggested that the president should consolidate his own power by issuing the measures we have seen in the past two days. And this policy is certainly supported by certain countries in the Middle East, which includes Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates governments in particular,” he said.

Jones said the Tunisian leader is following the footsteps of other rulers who ruled with an iron fist.

“The president is consolidating power in his hands and is threatening anyone who engages in violence will get bullets. He has not learnt the lessons of Arab uprising, which is that most people in the region don’t want authoritarian leaders who basically concentrate violent powers in their hands and threaten the population with violence. This is a huge significant moment in the middle east that represents an infringement of authoritarian rule once again,” he said.

President Saied was elected in 2019. The election that year was the second free presidential vote in the north African nation. The electorate hoped he would improve their lives and move the country forward.

The developments Sunday came after months of wrangling between the president and Prime Minister Mechichi. A parliamentary coalition led by the biggest political party, Ennahdha, supported the prime minister.

On Monday, the military sealed off the parliament building and supporters of the president and Ennahdha clashed outside.

On Tuesday, Ennahdha called for dialogue to end the political crisis. The party said there is a need to preserve democratic gains and return the country to constitutional order.

Mohamed-Dhia Hammami is a political science researcher based in Tunis. He said Tunisia can solve its problem.

“We still have what we call a national organization, mostly a strong and powerful labor union UGTT, that can play the role of a mediator for Kais Saied and the others. Yesterday, [there were] calls from one of the quartet members of the 2013 mediation calling for national dialogue, and calling for similar mediation between Kais Saied, the president and Rached Ghannouchi, the head of the Ennahdha and the head of the parliament. So that might be an option,” he said.

In 2013, Tunisia’s National Dialogue Quartet helped resolve the political crisis, their effort won them the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize.

However, some experts fear the current political crisis may end in an impasse and a standoff, leading to a conflict.

Hammami said the president cannot hold power that long.

“I don’t think it will be dark as Syria or Egypt or Yemen but I think that we are facing a risk of the authoritarian term. But at the same time, we should keep in mind that the current president Kais Saied is an outsider to the system, his understanding of the complexity of things is limited. He doesn’t have the political party that allows him to govern the country like Bin Ali did, the former dictator. And a significant part of the establishment and political elite are opposing or at least skeptical of his recent moves,” he said.

Tunisia has achieved democracy in recent years, but the country has struggled with high unemployment, corruption and slow economic growth.

Source: Voice of America

Biden Revives Trump’s Africa Business Initiative

The Biden administration on Tuesday announced a new push to expand business ties between U.S. companies and Africa, with a focus on clean energy, health, agribusiness and transportation infrastructure on the continent.

U.S. industry executives welcomed the interest but said dollar flows will lag until the administration wraps up its lengthy review of Trump administration trade measures and sets a clear policy on investments in liquefied natural gas.

Dana Banks, senior director for Africa at the White House National Security Council, told a conference the administration planned to “re-imagine” and revive Prosper Africa, an initiative launched by former President Donald Trump in 2018, as the “centerpiece of U.S. economic and commercial engagement with Africa.”

Travis Adkins, deputy assistant administrator for Africa at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), added: “We’re looking at the ways in which we [can] foster two-way trade, looking at mutually beneficial partnerships that work together to mobilize investment, create jobs, and … shared opportunities on both sides of the Atlantic.”

President Joe Biden, who requested nearly $80 million for the initiative in his budget proposal in May, aims to focus it on women and equity, with an expanded role for small- and medium-sized businesses, Banks said.

The administration’s goal was to “reinvigorate Prosper Africa as the centerpiece of U.S. economic and commercial engagement with Africa,” she said.

“This is an area that is a priority both at home and abroad,” Banks told Reuters ahead of the conference, adding that African countries were eager to expand their cooperation with the United States.

China and Europe

U.S. business executives warn the United States is in danger of being overtaken by China and Europe, which are already investing and signing trade agreements across the continent.

“We can’t wait another year to devise an Africa policy; we need to be bold in our thinking,” said Scott Eisner, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s U.S.-Africa Business Center.

He said many companies had started to eye investments in Kenya given the Trump administration’s talks with Nairobi on a bilateral free trade agreement, but that those plans were on ice until the policy review was completed.

The U.S. Trade Representative’s office had no immediate comment on the status of the review.

Liquefied natural gas

Another hurdle is uncertainty about the administration’s policy on LNG projects.

Nigeria and other countries are eager to secure U.S. investment in such plans, but are waiting to see whether the administration will back LNG investments even as it seeks to halve U.S. fossil-fuel emissions.

“We’ve committed as an institution to have over 50% of our investments focused on activities that combat climate change,” said Kyeh Kim, a senior official at Millennium Challenge Corporation, an independent U.S. foreign aid agency.

Source: Voice of America