Grieg Star Explained

Grieg Star Group AS
Type:Private
Foundation:1961
Location:Bergen, Norway
Key People:Matt Duke (CEO)
Area Served:Global
Industry:Shipping
Revenue:170mUSD (2019)
Num Employees:1100 (2019)
Parent:Grieg Group
Subsid:Grieg Star AS, Grieg Green, Grieg Philippines, Grieg Edge, various ship owning companies
Homepage:www.griegstar.com

Grieg Star Group AS is a corporation within shipping and shipping related businesses. The Grieg Star Group is a part of the Grieg Group, established in 1884. It has subsidiaries within shipping, ship owning, ship management, crewing, sustainable ship recycling and maritime innovation. The headquarter of Grieg Star Group is in Grieg Gaarden, Bergen, Norway. Besides, the corporation has offices in Oslo, Manila and Shanghai.

Grieg Star Group specialises in Open hatch bulk carriers. Still, one-fourth of its vessels are conventional bulk carriers. Through its subsidiaries, the corporation owned and chartered over 40 ships in June 2020.[1] The group's own ship management subsidiary, Grieg Star AS, managed over half of these. Grieg Philippines Ltd was responsible for the manning of the vessels managed by Grieg Star AS.

In 2017, Grieg Star Group established a joint venture with Gearbulk, creating G2 Ocean AS.[2] The joint venture is the biggest Open Hatch shipping company in the world,[3] operating close to 125 ships by June 2020, with offices in 15 countries worldwide.[4] G2 Ocean commercially operates all of Grieg Star Group's controlled ships.

In 2010, Grieg Star Group established Grieg Green, a company specialising on green ship recycling. Grieg Green has since expanded its portfolio and offers a variety of green/sustainable services to the maritime businesses. Never having scrapped a ship using beaching (nautical), Grieg Star Group was the first company to recycle a vessel according to the EU Ship Recycling Regulation in January 2019.[5]

The corporation has had a sustainability focus for decades. In 2008, Grieg Star Group became a signatory of the ten principles of United Nations Global Compact, and in 2019 they joined the UNGC Sustainable Ocean Business Action Platform through Grieg Group.[6] In 2011, it was one of the founding companies of The Maritime Anti-Corruption Network (MACN). Grieg Foundation owns 25% of Grieg Star Group through its ownership in Grieg Group.

History

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Our Vessels . Grieg Star Group AS . 2020-09-01 . 2020-09-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200914193412/https://www.griegstar.com/our-competence/ship-development-and-management/vessels/ . live .
  2. American Journal of Transportation. G2 Ocean the joint Venture of Gearbulk and Grieg Star will start operating. 24 April 2017. 1 September 2020. 1 October 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171001165446/https://www.ajot.com/news/g2-ocean-the-joint-venture-of-gearbulk-and-grieg-star-will-start-operating. live.
  3. Journal of Commerce. G2 Ocean. 2020-09-01. 2020-08-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20200829165258/https://www.joc.com/breakbulk/breakbulk-carriers/g2-ocean. live.
  4. Web site: G2 Ocean. About us. 2020-09-01. 2020-10-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20201001000102/https://www.g2ocean.com/about-us/. live.
  5. Web site: Birkett . Holly . 10 February 2019 . Grieg Star recycles first ship under new EU regulations . Tradewinds.
  6. Web site: UN Global Compact. List of Participants Sustainable Ocean Business. 2020-09-01. 2021-03-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20210306100344/https://d306pr3pise04h.cloudfront.net/docs/publications%2FList+of+Participants_Sustainable+Ocean+Business.pdf. live.