2 - Chartering
2 - Chartering
2 - Chartering
INTRODUCTION TO CHARTERING
VOYAGE CHARTERS
TIME CHARTERS
BARBOAT CHARTERS
INTR O D UC TIO N TO C HA R TE R ING
1. Types of Chartering
2. Chartering Participators
3. Vessels and Cargoes
4. Standard Charter Party Forms
5. Charter Market
6. Comparison of Liner and Chartering
7. Associated Shipping Organizations
S ection 1 Types
of chartering
1Voyage chartering
2Time chartering
3 Contract of affreightment (COA)
4 Bareboat chartering
Charterparty
2.2 Characteristics of Time
Chartering
1. The shipowner should be responsible for the manning of
crew and bears the wages and provisions thereof.
2. The master shall be under the orders and directions of
the charterer as regards employment and agency. If the
charterer shall have reasonable cause to be dissatisfied
with the conduct of the master or officers, the ship-
owner shall on receiving the complaint make a change in
the appointments, if necessary.
2.2 Characteristics of Time
Chartering
3. The charterer should be responsible for the operation of
the vessel and bear the variable operational costs such as
bunkers, port charges, handling charge and canal tolls etc.
4. The shipowner should bear the fixed operational costs
such as costs relating to the vessel capital, ship’s
maintenance and stores, insurance premium and so on.
5. The ship is chartered as a whole/part and the hire is
calculated and collected according to the duration of
chartering and the agreed hire rate.
6. There are the provisions for the delivery/redelivery of
vessel.
3.D is tinctive features of voyage
and time chartering
Use of ship
Voyage C/P, use vessel for one voyages
Time C/P, use vessel for period of time
Operation
Voyage C/P, the actual operation of the vessel is left to the shipowner.
Time C/P, the actual operation of the vessel is left to the charterer.
Operating costs
Voyage C/P, are borne by the shipowner.
Time C/P, are borne by the charterer
Remuneration
Voyage C/P, freight is fixed in proportion to cargo quantity
Time C/P, hire is fixed in proportion to the time occupied.
The risk of loss of time
Voyage C/Pin principle borne by the shipowner
Time C/P is normally for the charterer’s
account.
4. TCT
Time Charter on Trip Basis
TCT means that the charterers employ vessels on a time charter basis for
the period of a specific voyage and for the carriage of a specific cargo and
this practice has given rise to the term time charter on trip basis: TCT.
TCT is similar to voyage chartering with regard to the fact that the
intention of the parties is to employ the vessel for one or two voyages. The
period of TCT is depend on the voyage and not fixed as time chartering.
There the similarity ends and the roles of charterer and ship-owner are
identical to those assumed for time charter.
There are no charter party forms designed purely for trip charters, and
trip chartering is negotiated and basis on standard time charter forms
and adapted slightly where appropriate.
The important feature of the time charter is still there, the charterer
has to pay hire according to the time spent in performance of the
voyage.
TCT
A time charter on trip basis is the simplest form of
time charter. During the time the vessel is on
charter the owner is paid an agreed daily rate, for
example $20,000 a day. The vessel is directed by
the charterer, who tells it where to load cargo, and
where to discharge it. The advantage of the TCT is
that it allows the charterer to provide greater
flexibility than a voyage charter under which the
contract involves the transport of a specific cargo.
5 COA
5.1 Introduction
(1)Meaning
Contract of affreightment is a generic term which covers
contracts
all for the carriage of goods by sea ( both charter parties and
bills of lading are contracts of affreightment).
It is also used in a more limited sense when it means a contract,
by which the shipowner promises to satisfy the charterer’s need
for transport capacity over a certain period of time, often one year
or several years.
(2)Advantages
The advantage of such a contract to the shipowner
is that security of employment is obtained for his
vessel for duration of thecontract, especially
valuable if theshipowner considersthat
freight rates are about to fall.
But the charterers may also be able to obtain
financial advantage (security of transportation) in
the event that market freight rates rise once they
have committed shipowner or operator on the
contract.
5.2 Characteristics of
Contract of Affreightment
1. Contract of affreightmentcan often be related
to voyage charter.
2. The length of the chartering period lies on the
total quantity of cargo to be transported
3. Cargoes carried under COA are usually bulky dry/liquid
cargoes
4. The risk of delay in sailing should be borne by
the shipowner
5. The freight should be calculated based on the quantity of
cargo
6. The partition of cost of loading and/or
discharge is usually as same as that of voyage
chartering.
6. Bareboat chartering
6.1 Introduction
(1)Meaning
The bareboat chartering is a charter of a different type. This
Charterer
Shipowner
Chartering brokers
1. Charterer
⑴ Meaning
The person entering into the charter party with the shipowner is
seller(third party)
Shipowners/NVOCC/MTO
2. Shipowner
⑴Meaning
The person entering into the charter party with the charterer is
known as the shipowner or owner who owns or operate ships.
⑵Kinds of shipowners
Some owners are of a single ship, others of large fleets. Some
concentrate on ships of a particular type or size. Many ships are
owned, in the legal sense, by financial institutions. This is
usually because the ships are being purchased under a hire
purchase arrangement. Some shipowners are state-controlled or
run their ships under the flag of the country in which they
reside, while others operate ships under a ‘convenient’ flag.
⑶ Disponent owner
Operators who employ a ship and then re-employ that vessel
for further business chartering her out in a new role are
described as disponent owners or time charter owners.
A disponent owner is a party deemed to be the shipowner
having control of the vessel by time charter.
We have seen that from time to time the party acting as the
“owner” may, in fact be the “disponent owner” such as the
party who has the ship on time charter. Occasionally there may
be more than one link in the chain between the actual
shipowner and the disponent owner involved in the immediate
fixture.
Standard charter party forms
Name Date Code name Publisher
Bareboat
4.Advantages of using standard charter
party forms
To standardize clauses.
To simplify the negotiation.
To reach international uniformity.
To reduce the risk of misunderstanding
and disputes arising in respect of the
matters covered by the contract.
5.1 Conditions