This vessel–Mozu Arrow– intrigued me about two months ago, but I never saw it. I’m grateful to Mike Abegg for these photos then.

I followed it on AIS, thinking maybe it’d lead to some Equatorial places, maybe to load tropical woods… but instead, after hitting lots of US East Coast ports, it headed to Europe.

G2 Ocean has quite the diverse fleet, including some TEFCs, totally enclosed forestry carriers.

So when I noticed they were back in Red Hook–from Europe!!– I decided to take a boat ride.

Notice the two side hatches on the port side.
And, inside that RORO-like space, cranes operate, here discharging 10 bundles at once. In high school I had a job offloading lumber, board by board, standing on the truck handing one board down to my boss–on a kiln rail car, as a furniture factory rep put down spacers so that air could get between the planks. He also measured or scaled each plank, making notations on his clipboard to determine how much my boss got paid and to create an inventory of how much wood they’d put in the drying kiln.

Here, that’s all been done, so the pace is faster.

But I still wondered where all this wood was coming from. In the past, wood might come from the tropics but in the form of logs, forest giants, their buttressed roots cut off, that might have fit only one log to a trailer.

So here’s the clue, and you can be sure I looked it up, especially when there’s an “over the top” slogan . . . perfection in timber. Where might this be coming from?

It turns out this is European wood from forests and mills in central and eastern Europe, especially Romania. I have to be honest . . . I’m not thrilled. I know they likely buy our stuff, but don’t we have forests and mills in the US? I’m guessing it’s planed timber, but there may be other products here.
All photos and sentiments, WVD.
As of yesterday evening, Mozu Arrow departed Red Hook for Baltimore.
10 comments
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November 21, 2020 at 12:23 pm
Arthur C Hamilton
Some prefer Norwegian Wood.
November 21, 2020 at 5:00 pm
tugster
isn’t it good?
November 21, 2020 at 1:08 pm
Frank
I don’t know the economics of it, but when I was doing consulting work in Washington all the fir was taken to Puyallup or Everett and cabled together into mile long floats and towed out to a Japanese factory ship 12 miles offshore.
November 21, 2020 at 5:04 pm
tugster
I’d love to know the economics of it, but it seems to me that forest products, like most raw materials, gain value at the factory. We have the skills and the capital, so why don’t we do the “process” here and sell that foreign with value added?
November 21, 2020 at 5:03 pm
Robin Denny
I do wonder how safe the current lifeboat system may be. On Mozu Arrow, as on many others, the lifeboat is suspended 80 or 90 feet above the sea. On release it would accelerate rapidly, hitting the sea at around 30 or 40 mph. and coming to an almost dead stop; not good for your back and spine even if facing aft.
November 22, 2020 at 12:09 am
George Schneider
Lifeboats are a great concern, and on the Great Lakes, where international agreements don’t come into play, the ships trading only there don’t carry lifeboats because statistically more people have been killed by them than saved by them. These “seagoing” ships, of course, are fitted with centrifugal devices that slow their descent, and have safety devices that only release when they sense water pressure on the bottom. Even so, there are plenty of accidents while doing the mandatory monthly operation of them, and result in deaths and lifelong injuries.
I looked right past the title TEFC and thought I was looking at more car carriers. Probably the biggest give-away is the lack of ventilation fans lining the upper decks. I imagine a wonderful aroma coming out of the cargo spaces. I refuse to imagine the smell of plywood glue.
November 22, 2020 at 12:11 am
George Schneider
Oh, another comment about lifeboats. Imagine losing power in one of these, rolling in rough weather, and lowering one of those boats. Your 80-foot pendulum could be disastrous.
November 23, 2020 at 11:24 am
Rembert
The theory of comparative advantage is accepted among economists, as far as I know, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_advantage. The critical issue may be, that it presupposes free markets – trends showed in the opposite direction these last years. A different question is, if it is really necessary, to produce waste gases by sending raw materials around the world to places, where there already exist in abundance. And to pack robust trunks into heavy plastic covers, even inside a „totally enclosed“ carrier.
But the same questions goes to american Cola, corn or computers, we buy in Europe. No cover without a layer of extra plastic these days.
November 30, 2020 at 4:35 pm
Paulb
There is a large forestry products importer and distributor right inside Red Hook Container Terminal, at pier 8. The market for bulk mass-market wood products is global. Products like Baltic Birch (the nice plywood used in making furniture) still mostly comes from baltic countries. America exports hardwoods more so than softwoods, from what I can tell.
Sourcing good quality oak and walnut here, in the country where it comes from, is harder than getting ahold of Ipe, Meranti, Babinga and other imported exotic expensive woods.
November 30, 2020 at 4:53 pm
tugster
Thanks, Paulb. I didn’t realize the distributor is located in the terminal. I’m glad to hear that. It must be a fairly recent development.