Spurred by the expanding bulk shipping and technological innovations, dry bulk vessels have gained considerable development in ship types, ship design, and operation since the invention of the first specialized dry bulk carrier in the early 1950s. However, questions like: what changes in technical specifications have occurred for dry bulk vessels during the past four decades; what triggered these changes and what impacts have these specific changes had on shipping costs or earnings potential, have never been examined systematically in previous work. Subsequently, this article attempts to investigate changes in main technical specifications and relationships between the main technical variables and their economic performance measured by costs and revenues of dry bulk carriers. Technical changes in speed, deadweight, lightweight, and engines are checked for the main types of dry bulk vessels, and trends revealed in these developments are demonstrated to be the consequences of both technical improvement and economical considerations. Additionally, it has been found that the earnings potential differs much from dry bulk vessels with different technical specifications. This can be manifested in the sensitivity analysis. The analysis of this article may contain useful information to practitioners of dry bulk shipping in guiding their market decisions about ship building and operations.
[1]
D Shneerson,et al.
THE OPTIMAL SHIP SIZE
,
1982
.
[2]
Albert W. Veenstra,et al.
The relationship between design and economic performance of ships
,
2006
.
[3]
David Ronen,et al.
The Effect of Oil Price on the Optimal Speed of Ships
,
1982
.
[4]
Warship,et al.
The Royal Institution of Naval Architects
,
1960,
Nature.
[5]
I L Buxton,et al.
Engineering economics and ship design
,
1971
.
[6]
Wayne K. Talley,et al.
INVENTORY COSTS AND OPTIMAL SHIP SIZE
,
1988
.