Cost of Somali piracy slumps as attacks fall

Monday, 12 May 2014 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

  • Cost almost halves to $3.2 billion in 2013
  • No large ship captured, primary cost is private security
  • West African piracy rises, but little data or coordination
Reuters: The cost of Somali piracy to the global economy fell by almost half last year as attacks slumped, but piracy in West Africa was on the rise, an annual security report said on Wednesday. The Oceans beyond Piracy report put the total cost of Somali piracy - by far the largest single threat to international shipping in recent years – at only $ 3.2 billion in 2013. There were still at least 50 hostages in Somali captivity in desperate conditions, held on average for most three years each, the report said. Gauging the level of threats in the Gulf of Guinea was difficult because of incomplete reporting but it was clear that rising numbers of seafarers were being kidnapped, it said. At the height of Somali pirate attacks in 2011, up to a dozen or more merchant ships were being held captive at any one time, often for multimillion-dollar ransoms. Since then, growing use of private security details and the presence of international warships have largely prevented successful attacks. No large vessels were seized in 2013. “The efforts of the international community and the shipping industry have considerably reduced the threat of Somali piracy,” says Jens Madsen, one of the report’s authors. “But we have yet to achieve the goal of ... zero vessels captured and zero hostages held.” Only a tiny proportion of the money spent on Somali piracy was being used for permanent solutions onshore, the pirates’ launching pad for attacks on passing ships, the report said. The lost majority of the funds was used for private security contractors and insurance premiums. Shipping companies, which in the past used larger and more costly teams and took expensive steps such as rerouting vessels and traveling at greater speed, were increasingly turning to smaller groups of armed personnel, the report said. Somali pirates were increasingly attacking local fishermen and smaller craft, often hoping to use their vessels to attack larger ships. In West Africa, tackling the attacks was complicated by the lack of regional cooperation and information sharing, it said. “Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea is fundamentally different (from) events taking place in the Indian Ocean,” said Madsen. “We observe... a high degree of violence in this region,” he said. “The constantly evolving tactics of West African piracy make it extremely difficult to isolate it from other elements of organised crime.”

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