Maersk
Summary
A Danish shipping and logistics conglomerate that operates the world's second-largest container shipping fleet, moving roughly 12 million containers annually and controlling an integrated supply chain from ocean freight to inland distribution.
Read When
- Analyzing global container shipping economics or freight rate dynamics
- Discussing supply chain integration or end-to-end logistics strategy
- Exploring maritime decarbonization efforts or alternative shipping fuels (green methanol)
- Referencing port congestion, trade route disruptions, or global trade flows
历史时间线
- 1904 — A.P. Møller founds the company as a single steamship operation in Svendborg, Denmark
- 1928 — Maersk Line begins regular container shipping services, eventually becoming the world's largest carrier
- 2017 — Acquires Hamburg Süd for €3.7 billion, consolidating its position as a top-two global container carrier
- 2023 — Orders first green methanol-powered vessels, committing $10B+ to fleet decarbonization by 2030
商业模式
Maersk is undergoing a strategic transformation from a pure ocean carrier to an integrated container logistics company. While its core remains the fleet of 700+ vessels carrying containers across 370+ ports, the company now generates roughly 30% of revenue from land-based logistics services: warehousing, customs clearance, inland transportation, and supply chain management through acquisitions like LF Logistics and Pilot Freight Services. Ocean freight remains the profit engine, with revenue heavily influenced by spot and contract freight rates on key trade lanes (Asia-Europe, Trans-Pacific, Trans-Atlantic). The company also operates terminals through APM Terminals, handling over 90 million TEUs annually at 76 port terminals globally.
护城河分析
Maersk's scale creates a structural cost advantage — its fleet size allows it to negotiate better port fees, bunker fuel pricing, and canal transit rates than smaller competitors. The vertical integration from ocean vessel to warehouse door reduces customer reliance on multiple vendors, creating sticky B2B relationships. APM Terminals provides privileged access to port infrastructure that competitors must pay to use. The push into green shipping — with orders for 25+ methanol-enabled vessels — positions Maersk ahead of regulatory requirements and creates future competitive differentiation as carbon pricing reshapes shipping economics.
关键数据
- Fleet of 700+ vessels with a combined capacity exceeding 4.3 million TEU (twenty-foot equivalent units)
- Operates 76 container terminals across 43 countries through APM Terminals
- Revenue of approximately $50 billion in 2023, down from pandemic-era peaks but still among the highest in shipping history
有趣事实
- A single Maersk Triple-E class vessel (the largest ever built) is 400 meters long — longer than the Eiffel Tower is tall — and can carry 18,000 containers
- Maersk's first green methanol vessel, the Laura Maersk, sailed in 2023 using fuel made from biogenic CO₂ captured from biomass — a technology the company helped pioneer
- If all containers shipped by Maersk annually were placed end-to-end, they would wrap around the Earth approximately 3 times