Container ships crowd the dock in Hamburg, Germany. Global shipping traffic has boomed over the past 20 years.
Photograpy by Daniel Reinhardt/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images
Published November 26, 2014
Ship traffic on the world's oceans has quadrupled over the past two decades, according to a new study that's the first to rely on satellite data to produce global maps of shipping on the open seas.
The data for the study, which was published on November 17 in Geophysical Research Letters, came from a series of satellites that carried radar altimeters, devices that measure the height of the sea's surface at a given location by bouncing a radar beam off it. The data had been used primarily to measure sea-level rise, ocean currents, and even the topography of the ocean floor. But the radar echoes can also pinpoint the location of icebergs—and ships.
"As we processed all the archives of the altimeter missions for the iceberg studies, we realized that it can also be used to study the evolution of ship traffic," says study author Jean Tournadre, a researcher at the French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea in Brittany. (See "Watch and Listen to the Surprisingly Noisy Death of an Iceberg.")
Tournadre's study reveals that ship traffic—and the environmental impact that goes with it—has been booming even faster than the volume of international trade. "The main point," he says "was to show where growth is important and where it can have a potential impact on both the sea and the atmosphere."
Bustling Waters
Tournadre used a sample of more than 300,000 ship signatures recorded by the altimeters from 1992 to 2012—a fraction of the total traffic—to map year-to-year changes in the density of ship traffic. He found that traffic increased by about 6 percent a year in the first decade, then soared by 10 percent annually after 2002.
Since ships haul 90 percent of world trade, the changes in ship traffic reflect changes in the global economy, especially the rising importance of Asia. Although the Atlantic Ocean's share of global traffic dropped from nearly 40 percent in 1992 to 32 percent in 2012, the Pacific's share rose from 35 to 39 percent.
Meanwhile, ship traffic on the Indian Ocean and China Sea now make up 25 to 30 percent of global traffic, up from 17 percent in 1992. (Read "The Ship-Breakers" in National Geographic magazine).
China drives most of the region's traffic. According to United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), it's now the world's largest importer of dry bulk commodities such as coal and iron ore, mostly from Brazil and Australia, as well as of crude oil, from the Gulf states. China's role as Africa's biggest single trade partner is reflected in the dramatic rise in traffic along the Cape route, between Asia and South Africa.
"The Indian Ocean and China Seas are directly falling under the 'China effect,' " says Cesar Ducruet, who researches global vessel movement at the French National Center for Scientific Research in Paris.
Demand from China as well as other Asian economies, he says, has made the Suez route between Europe and Asia the busiest in the world. The Suez route stretches across the Indian Ocean to the Suez Canal, passing through hubs in Singapore, Sri Lanka, Egypt, Italy, and Spain.
"On the Pacific side, America is a significant market, but just a single one. [On the Suez route] you get access to several markets at once—Europe, the Middle East, and Africa," says Jean-Paul Rodrigue, a professor of transportation geography at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York

