Finnlines

Finnlines Plc
Public (Nasdaq Helsinki: FLG1S)
Industry Shipping
Founded 1947
Headquarters Helsinki, Finland
Area served
Northern Europe
Services Ferry transport
Short sea shipping
Revenue Decrease 563.6 million Euro (2013) [1]
Decrease 83.7 million Euro (2013) [1]
Number of employees
1,806 (31.12.2013)
Website www.finnlines.com
Finnlines' flagship M/S Finnstar departing Helsinki, April 2007.

Finnlines Plc (Finnish: Finnlines Oyj)[2] is a Finnish shipping company that operates freight throughout Northern Europe as well as passenger services in the Baltic Sea. In the past, Finnlines has operated ships under the brands Finncarriers, Finnflow Systems, Finnjet Lines, and FG Shipping Oy Ab. As of 2006, Grimaldi Group is the largest owner of Finnlines with 75.28% (30 April 2014) of all shares.[3]

Finnlines offers ro-pax service between Finland and Germany, ro-ro services between Finland, Poland, Denmark, west coast of Sweden, UK and BeNeLux countries as well as the Bay of Biscay. FinnLink offers several daily departures between Kapellskär, Sweden and Naantali, Finland. NordöLink offers several daily departures between Malmö, Sweden and Travemünde, Germany. TransRussiaExpress runs a regular direct service between Germany (Lübeck and Sassnitz), Latvia (Ventspils) and Russia (St.Petersburg).

Finnlines offers a connection for travelers from Helsinki to Germany, Naantali via Åland Islands to Kapellskär and Malmö to Travemünde. Additionally Finnlines has a connection between Germany and Russia.

Finnlines provides port services in Helsinki and Turku under the name Finnsteve.

Finnlines was founded in 1947 as a subsidiary of Merivienti Oy, founded earlier the same year by Enso-Gutzeit and Kansaneläkelaitos, to operate Merivienti's liner service from Finland to the United States.[4]

History

1947–1977

Merivienti Oy (English: Sea Export Ltd.) was founded on 18 April 1947 by the Finnish forest industry giant Enso-Gutzeit and Kansaneläkelaitos (Finnish Social Insurance)—both completely or partially state-owned companies—to ensure transportation of forest industry products from Finland to Western block countries.[4] According to the 1947 Paries Peace Treaty with the Soviet Union, Finland had to pay US$300 million worth of war reparations to the Soviet Union, mostly in industrial goods. With only 30% of the Finnish merchant fleet having survived the war, and 2/3 of the surviving ships being used by the Allied forces or under forced charter to the Soviet Union, new tonnage was desperately needed.[5]

In May and June 1947, Merivienti acquired three second-hand steamers for traffic into Europe. During the same year, Merivienti decided to start liner traffic from Finland to the east coast of the United States. With this in mind, Merivienti acquired three larger second-hand steamships, named SS Hamina, SS Pankakoski and SS Tornator. To operate these ships, a new company Oy Finnlines Ltd, was founded in November 1947. Finnlines was a 100% subsidiary of Merivienti and owned no ships of its own—instead the Merivienti ships were operated by and marketed as Finnlines.[4] In subsequent years, vessels owned by other companies, such as Enso-Gutzeit (for whom they managed SS Enso), Neste, Outokumpu, Yhtyneet Paperitehtaat, Amer-Tupakka and Thomesto.[6] Finnlines' traffic into the United States begun in 1948.[7] The used ships were soon found to be too small and during the 1950s seven new freighters were delivered to various owners to be operated by Finnlines. At this time the company started using names with the "Finn" prefix that has become characteristic of their fleet.[8] A line to the United Kingdom was opened in 1955.[7]

A model of Finncarriers' MS Capella av Stockholm, built 1972 as MS Hans Gutzeit. The model retains the original Finnlines colours, with the Finnlines text on the hull replaced by a Finncarriers text.

The company first begun carrying passengers in 1962, when the car ferry MS Hansa Express opened a new service linking Hanko, Finland to Travemünde, Germany via Visby in Sweden.[7] The ship was found to be too small from the start, and Hanko a poor choice for the Finnish terminus of the line. The route was altered to HelsinkiKalmarTravemünde in 1963, and two large new ferries were delivered for the route in 1966.[8] MS Finnhansa was the larger of the two sister ships, surpassing MS Finnpartner by ten centimeters;[9] it was the largest ferry in the Baltic Sea at the time. Having two ferries year-round proved to be unprofitable and the Finnpartner was sold in 1969.[10] In the late 60s Finnlines developed the Finnflow cargo-handling system, which resulted in the building of the company's first RORO freighters MS Finncarrier, MS Hans Gutzeit and MS Finnfellow.[8]

In 1973 Finnlines purchased MS Stena Atlantica from Stena Line and renamed her MS Finnpartner, for service to Germany alongside the Finnhansa. During the winter season the second Finnpartner was sent cruising to the Mediterranean.[11] In the same year Finnlines also placed an order at the Wärtsilä Helsinki shipyard for a new gas turbine-powered ferry for the Finland-Germany service that was to be the largest, longest, and fastest in the world.[12] Before the new ferry was delivered several changes occurred to Finnlines: in 1975 Finnlines and their rival Finland Steamship Company (FÅA, which later became Effoa) began collaborating in freight and passenger traffic.[7] Finncarriers was formed as a joint freight operator, while the Finland Steamship Company's Finland-Germany passenger services were merged into Finnlines' services, bringing MS Finlandia to Finnlines' fleet.[13] This meant the second Finnpartner was chartered to Olau Line.[11] With the Finlandia and Finnhansa, Finnlines maintained a year-round service to Germany, while MS Bore Star was chartered from Bore Line for cruising for the winter seasons of 1975–76 and 76–77 (she was marketed under the name Finnpartner).[14]

1977–1987

The new, large, fast GTS Finnjet was delivered to Finnlines in May 1977,[12] replacing both of the old ferries on the route. With her 31-knot top speed the Finnjet was able to cross the Baltic in a mere 22 hours, and her accommodations were superior to those of any ferry of the day. Unfortunately she had also been designed before the oil crisis, meaning her operational costs were much higher than originally planned.[8] After delivery of the Finnjet, the Finlandia was rebuilt into the cruise ship MS Finnstar, becoming Finnlines' first (and to date last) genuine cruise ship. The Finnstar's service was cut short by the Finnish maritime worker's strike of 1980, as result of which she ceased service and was laid up in Barcelona. In May 1981 she was sold to the Loke Shipping Co.[13] In October of the same year, the Finnjet was rebuilt with additional diesel engines, allowing for more economic operations during the off-season.[8]

In 1982 the first of the new "jumbo-RORO" ships was built for the Finland-United Kingdom run. Four sister ships were built over the next decade.[8] Also in 1982, Enso-Gutzeit decided to give up its shipping activities and as a result 75% of Finnlines was sold to other shipping companies. All Enso-Gutzeit ships sailing for Finncarriers were sold to Effoa or Neste Oy and all of Enso-Gutzeit's shares of Finncarriers were sold to Effoa. Finncarriers thus became a subsidiary of Effoa.[7] Several mergers followed during the 1980s when Effoa merged various other companies it completely or partially owned into Finncarriers.[8] In 1986 Enso-Gutzeit finally bowed out of shipping activities completely when they sold their remaining share of GTS Finnjet (25%) to Effoa, who transferred the ship into the fleet of their other subsidiary Silja Line.[12] In the same year a new company, Finnlink, was founded to operate freight between Finland and Sweden. The company's owners were mainly the same as the owners of Finnlines, and Finnlines itself owned 15% of Finnlink.[7]

1987–2002

Finnlines ships in Helsinki in late 2004

A full turn-around in Effoa's operations took place in 1989 when the company decided to separate their freight-carrying operations from their passenger operations. In place of dividends, shares of Finncarriers were given to stock owners, and after several mergers, diffusions, and name-changes, a new Finnlines Group was born in 1990. In the following years Finnlines acquired Bore Line, the operations of which were incorporated into Finnlines in 1992.[7] Around the same time Finnlines started collaboration with the German shipping company Poseidon Schiffahrt AG on Helsinki–Travemünde traffic, which was marketed under the name Finncarriers-Poseidon. During 1994 and 1995 four new combi-roro ships (known as the Hansa class), capable of carrying 114 passengers alongside their freight capacity, were delivered for Finncarriers-Poseidon traffic.[8]

In 1997 Finnlines made a deal with the German Stinnes AG, essentially swapping the shared Finnlines ownership of the German company BLT with the full ownership of Poseidon Schiffahrt AG. As a result, the company name "Poseidon" disappeared from the sides of Finland-Germany ships and Poseidon became Finnlines Deutschland AG. With Poseidon, the trainferry operator Railship and 40% of Team Lines also passed into Finnlines' ownership. In the same year Finnlines also became the sole owner of Finnlink.[7] In 1999 Finnlines took delivery of two new ro-pax vessels, MS Finnclipper and MS Finneagle, both with a passenger capacity of over 400.[8] In 2001 Finncarriers was merged into the parent company. In the same year Finnlines purchased the rest of Team Lines, and in 2002 the Swedish Nordö-Link (trafficking between Malmö and Travemünde) also became a Finnlines subsidiary.[7]

2002–Present

Finnlines/Cronos containers in Germany.

In 2004 Finnlines decided to further simplify the myriad of names under which it operated ships, merging Finnlink and Nordö-Link into the parent company. Finnlines also ordered five new large ro-pax ferries from the Italian shipyard Fincantieri.[8] After numerous delays, the first vessel, MS Finnstar was delivered in August 2006 for the Helsinki–Travemünde service, MS Finnmaid followed later in the same year, while MS Finnlady, MS Europalink and MS Nordlink were delivered in February, March and July 2007, respectively.[15][16] Coinciding with the delivery of MS Nordlink the old MS Malmö Link was sold.[16] In January 2007 the Italian Grimaldi Group became the largest owner of Finnlines and expressed interest in purchasing the entire company. However, a public tender offer made to the other owners in November 2006 resulted in Grimaldi gaining only 85,029 stocks, or 0.18% of the total.[16] In August 2007 it was reported that Finnlines has ordered six new ice classed roro vessels from the Jinling Shipyard in China, with planned delivery dates in 2010 for the first two vessels and 2011 for the remaining four.[17][18]

Services

MS Finnstar, one of the Star Class ferries on Helsinki—Travemünde service.

Finnlines' roro cargo ships serve Finland, Russia, Sweden, Poland, Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, the United Kingdom, and Spain. Finnlines also maintains freight/passenger services on the routes Helsinki–Travemünde, NaantaliKapellskär, and Malmö–Travemünde.

Freight/passenger services

Helsinki–Travemünde

Finnlines makes runs between Helsinki and Travemünde on three ropax ferries.

MS Finnclipper, one of the ropax ferries in Finnlink service (photographed in Travemünde in older Finnlines colours).

Naantali–Kapellskär

Marketed as Finnlink, Finnlines offers freight and passenger service between Naantali (Finland) and Kapellskär (Sweden) with two ropax ferries. There are also additional roro ferries on top of the ropax services (as of August 2016).

MS Lübeck Link, used on Nordö Link service until 2007.

Malmö–Travemünde

The Nordö Link service is currently operated by three ropax vessels.

Freight services

Helsinki–Gdynia

Finnlines makes runs between Helsinki and Gdynia with three/four departures per week.

Helsinki–Aarhus

Finnlines makes runs between Helsinki and Aarhus with two departures per week.

References

  1. 1 2 Key Figures, retrieved 16 September 2013
  2. "Finnlines Oyj". Business Information System. Helsinki: National Board of Patents and Registration, Tax Administration. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  3. Finnlines website, retrieved on September 16, 2013
  4. 1 2 3 Karonen, Petri (1992). Enso-Gutzeit Oy laivanvarustajana: Oy Finnlines Ltd ja Merivienti Oy 1947–1982. Imatra: Enso-Gutzeit. pp. 17–23. ISBN 952-9690-00-2.
  5. Karonen (1992). p. 11
  6. Karonen (1992). pp. 135–137
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Finnlines' 55 Years, retrieved 4 May 2007
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 The Development of Finnlines' Baltic Fleet, retrieved 4 May 2007
  9. (Finnish) FCBS Forum, retrieved 4 May 2007
  10. "M/S Finnpatner (1966)" (in Swedish). at Fakta om Fartyg (Swedish), retrieved 4 May 2007
  11. 1 2 (Swedish) M/S Saga (1966) at Fakta om Fartyg (Swedish), retrieved 4 May 2007
  12. 1 2 3 finnjetweb.com – Finnjet chronicle, retrieved 4 May 2007
  13. 1 2 (Swedish) M/S Finlandia (1967) at Fakta om Fartyg (Swedish), retrieved 4 May 2007
  14. "M/S Bore Star" (in Swedish). at Fakta om Fartyg (Swedish), retrieved 4 May 2007
  15. (Finnish) FCBS Forum – Finnlines builds new ropaxes, retrieved 4 May 2007
  16. 1 2 3 Finnlines interim report 1 January – 30 June 2007, retrieved 20 August 2007
  17. Finnlines press release: Finnlines investing in new roro vessels, retrieved 24 August 2007
  18. Optima Shipbrokers: Optima Weekly volume 171, week 33, retrieved 20 August 2007

External links

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