container ship in 2004 Soon after the shipping industry reorganization of 1964, in which Japanese shipping companies were restructured into six groups, world shipping moved toward
containerization. Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Ltd. (MOL), formed by the merger of OSK and MS, began container services on the
California route, joining a space-charter consortium of four Japanese operators. Business results improved after the merger, and the loss brought forward was written off in 1966. The company was recapitalized at ¥20 billion in 1968, and at ¥30 billion in 1972. The owned fleet increased to 152 vessels, totalling in 1974, and the operating fleet—owned vessels and time-chartered vessels—numbered 291 vessels, totalling .
Containerization The first container ship, MOL's
America Maru, sailed from Kobe to San Francisco in October 1969. Containerization spread to other routes, including the Australia route, with NYK and Yamashita-Shinnihon Steamship Co., in 1970; the
North Pacific route, with five other Japanese companies, in 1971; and the
Europe route, as part of the
TRIO Group consisting of MOL,
Nippon Yusen Kaisha,
Overseas Container Line,
Ben Line, and
Hapag-Lloyd, in 1971. On the New York route and
Mediterranean routes a container service began in 1972. In June 2013, one of its container ship,
MOL Comfort, broke in two and sank off
Yemen. The bow section caught fire before sinking. All 26 crew reported rescued by three other container ships that diverted to her,
Hapag-Lloyd's
Yantian Express,
Hanjin Beijing of now defunct
Hanjin Shipping and
ZIM's
ZIM India. The crews of three ships found them in two raft and one lifeboat.
Carrying ore The other trend was toward specialization. Both OSK and MS had
ore carriers, and after the merger MOL held the largest share of the Japanese ore market. The
Yachiyosan Maru, at , built in 1970 under a cargo guarantee from
Nippon Steel Corporation, was the largest ore carrier in Japan at that time.
Cars MOL built
Oppama Maru, the first Car Carrier ship in Japan in 1965, under cargo guarantee from Nissan Motor Company. MOL could not carry cars at a low freight rate because it had to stick to the conference rate. Nissan therefore established the
Nissan Motor Car Carrier Co. in 1970 to operate
Oppama Maru and transport its cars. Based on this model, MOL and
Honda Motor Co. established the Act Maritime Co. in 1973 to carry Honda cars to the United States. MOL
Ro-Ro Car Carrier division is named ACE (Auto Car Carrier Express), and majority of the Roll-on/roll-off vessels in the company fleet have the suffix "Ace" in their names. The division specializes in maritime transport and distribution of brand new and used automobiles, trucks, trailers,
Mafi roll trailers, heavy construction machineries and further types of rolling freight. Since 1990, MOL has invested in the regional feeder line
Euro Marine Logistics. In July 2006, MOL-operated suffered one of the worst stability accident in the industry. In that occasion, despite all her cargo was a total loss, the ship was salvaged and still sails. On 1 January 2019, MV
Sincerity Ace caught fire when sailing northwest of
Oahu, en route from
Japan to
Honolulu port. Several vessels sailing close by were diverted by the US Coast Guard to rescue her crew, however 4 fatalities and 1 missing person were reported. On 17 February 2022,
Felicity Ace caught fire close to Azores islands, en route from
Emden to Davisville in US. The ship was fully loaded with Porsche and Volkswagen cars. After sending a distress signal, the 22 crew members were airlifted, while a Portuguese navy ship and four cargo vessels went to rescue, waiting for salvage tugs to arrive. The ship sank on 2 March while under tow.
Oil crisis The U.S. gold embargo in 1971 and the advent of a floating world monetary system was a severe blow for MOL. It changed its financial strategy, keeping more funds in U.S. dollars and in other currencies. More serious was the
1973 oil crisis. MOL immediately cancelled tankers under construction and recorded its best business performance since the merger; freight revenue topped ¥327.5 billion. Soon afterward, however, results deteriorated rapidly and the downslide continued until 1978. MOL made great efforts to curtail costs, and simultaneously increased the size and number of container ships. Containerization increased on routes between industrially advanced and developing countries, and huge investment was needed to finance this expansion. The development of
intermodal transportation on the North America route also began, and MOL introduced a Mini Land Bridge (MLB) service in 1972, using rail transport as well as shipping to reduce transit time, to compete with the U.S. shipping company Sea-Land, extending the service to IPI (Interior Point Intermodal) service in 1980. Around the time that the MLB service started, the world trade structure began to change and in 1979 about 60% of general cargo from
Asia to the United States came to be loaded at newly industrialized countries (NICs). MOL reorganized its routes, changing its starting ports for U.S. voyages from Japan to Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other NICs, while shipping companies in the newly industrialized countries captured this new demand and branched out into the Pacific routes. The competition in sea transportation increased and MOL began a direct container service between the Far East and the west coast of North America in 1982. MOL invested huge capital to consolidate these services and to establish a service network in the United States. As a countermeasure against rising oil costs MOL built energy-efficient ships, cooperating with Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding.
Awobasan Maru, delivered in 1981, was the first ship incorporating innovations that reduced fuel consumption by 30%. In 1974 MOL established the Saudi Arabian Shipping Co., Ltd. (SASCO) and Arabian Marine Operation Co. Ltd. (AMOCO) as joint ventures with the prince of
Saudi Arabia in
Jeddah. SASCO is the shipowner, while AMOCO manages
tanker operations. MOL hoped that this joint venture would give it an advantageous status in any future nationalization of oil, but at first the performance of these companies was not good, and AMOCO acquired the rights to bunker supply in 1977. Two years later the second oil crisis occurred and MOL was able to get a stable bunker supply.
Scaling back Personnel expenses increased after the first oil crisis, and the
yen was revalued. These changes hit MOL heavily as a large part of its income was in U.S. dollars. To make itself more competitive, MOL reduced the number of its own vessels and increased the number of
flag of convenience (FOC) ships; its own ships fell in number from 127 in 1975 to 82 in 1982, and the number of employees at sea from 3,127 to 2,233, while freight revenue increased from ¥282 billion to ¥476 billion over the same period. MOL also built highly rationalized ships in cooperation with MES, which would require a crew of only 18, the minimum number accepted by the Seamen's Act, while other ships required 22 or 24. The first super-advanced ship was the
Canberra Maru, delivered in 1979, which was put on the Australia route.
Passenger service In 1970 MOL established Mitsui OSK Passenger Co., Ltd. (MOP), with the reorganization of JES. MOP has three passenger ships. The company was the only one in Japan to operate an ocean-going passenger service at that time, but later in the 1990s a few Japanese shipping companies entered this market to cope with the boom in travelling by sea.
LNG In 1983 the import of
liquefied natural gas (LNG) on Free on Board (FOB) conditions began as part of the diversification of Japan's energy resources, and MOL, NYK, Kawasaki Steamship, Chubu Electric Power Company, Incorporated and other Japanese electricity and gas companies jointly established two specialized companies, Badak LNG Transport Inc. and Arun, to transport LNG from
Indonesia. These two companies operated seven LNG ships, constructed by MOL and other shipping companies. MOL also took delivery in 1983 of the
Kohzan Maru, Japan's first large-sized
methanol carrier, and transported methanol from Saudi Arabia to Japan. Japan's exports of industrial plant grew at that time and modularization began. MOL was interested in the transportation of massive plants and took delivery of five specialized ships, including the
Atlas Maru, equipped with a 600-ton capacity
derrick, one of the largest in the world. Plant exports began to decline in the late 1980s and these special ships were mostly sold or changed their flags. ==Restructuring==