Traders at an unimaginable risk with import ban from China keep coal cargo in limbo

Photographer: Wang Jianmin / VCG via Getty Images

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Seafarers trapped for months on ships transporting Australian coal off the coast of China are trapped between authorities not letting them unload their cargo and buyers not letting them leave.

Deteriorating relations between Beijing and Canberra have stranded 74 ships, about 8.1 million tons of coal and an estimated 1,480 sailors off Chinese ports, according to an analysis of shipping data by Bloomberg. The original charterer of two of the ships wants them to go elsewhere to relieve the exhausted seafarers, but so far the merchants who own the cargo have disagreed.

“It is the end receiver who has not given the green light” for the vessel Jag Anand to sail to another country where it could change crews, said Jan Dieleman, Cargill Inc.’s president of marine transportation operations. The Minneapolis-based company is the original charterer of that vessel and the Navios Coral vessel, both of which have been moored off Jingtang harbor since June awaiting the unloading of their cargoes of Australian coal.

The crew of the Jag Anand told port authorities it was ready to unload when it arrived and the bill of lading has said the ship must unload its cargo before it departs, Dieleman said. He refused to identify the final recipient of the cargo, but said that if the ship attempted to leave for another country to change crews without their permission, the ship could be arrested and seafarers put in prison.

“We don’t just want to get these people off the ship, we also want to get them home,” said Dieleman.

.Source