Hapag-Lloyd renews and
expands Inmarsat Fleet Xpress commitment
09 Sep 2021
Connectivity agreement
renewal covering Hapag-Lloyd managed ships
extends global container carrier’s commitment by
integrating former UASC fleet and bringing 33
more ships under the contract
Inmarsat, the world leader
in global, mobile satellite communications, has
expanded its agreement to deliver maritime
broadband to Hapag-Lloyd, after the global
transport group renewed its Fleet Xpress
contract for a further five years and committed
33 more ships to the market’s leading very small
aperture terminal (VSAT) service.
Under the extended
agreement, which now covers 77 ships, the Fleet
Xpress hybrid of Ka-band and continuous L-band
back-up service replaces Ku-band systems onboard
ships merged into the Hapag-Lloyd fleet
following the earlier acquisition of United Arab
Shipping Company (UASC) in May 2017. Scheduled
Fleet Xpress installations enable seamless
service migration based on the end of the
outgoing supplier’s contract.
“The further
standardisation of our vessel communication
systems is central to our Maritime IT strategy,”
said Florian Liebetrau, Director IT - Marine &
Maritime Operations, Hapag-Lloyd. “The
outstanding reliability and robustness of
Inmarsat’s Fleet Xpress as a product played a
key role in our decision to expand our
commitment. Hapag-Lloyd has a mature strategy
for its vessel connectivity and management which
demands systems-wide predictability,
reliability, and integration to sustain our
global vision for container transport.”
Hapag Lloyd was one of the
first major global shipping companies to commit
to Inmarsat’s Fleet Xpress following service
launch in 2016, transitioning all of its
in-house managed ships to Inmarsat’s maritime
broadband service for vessel operations and crew
connectivity. The five-year contract envisaged
expanding data traffic and scalability to handle
fleet growth.
“We are delighted to renew
and expand the work we do with one of shipping’s
most advanced owners for IT, ship-shore
connectivity and digitalisation,” said Ronald
Spithout, President, Inmarsat Maritime.
“Standardisation and integration are pivotal
enablers for corporates. This agreement and its
expansion to 33 additional ships clearly
demonstrate Hapag-Lloyd’s objectives are being
met by the reliability, performance, and service
support provided by Inmarsat’s Fleet Xpress.”
The new agreement includes
the flexibility for Fleet Xpress-connected ships
that are managed out of house and linked to
Hapag-Lloyd operations to be brought under the
same contract terms without renegotiation.
Offering an insight into
the major developments in shipping’s digital
journey in recent years, Spithout said “The
average committed information rates of data
acceptable to deep-sea container lines today are
roughly double the maximum information rates
they expected in 2016. On average, a container
ship’s monthly data traffic in 2021 is around
three and a half times the level experienced
five years ago. Inmarsat is meeting this rapid
growth in demand for connectivity at sea.”