It’s time for the independent ship manager to shine

Lloyd's List: The Shipping Podcast - A podcast by Lloyd's List - Fridays

THIS IS A SPONSORED PODCAST IN ASSOCIATION WITH EAGLESTAR In this podast, Eaglestar managing director Capt Peter Liew discusses how to future-proof the ship manager at a time of change, and how to position the business to be competitive. For most of its life, Eaglestar was the in-house manager for Malaysia’s MISC. Now fully independent, it has found new opportunities for business in the world of sustainability. Is ship management an art or a science? Can a third-party manager that began life as the in-house manager of a major international group ever be considered fully independent? How does a new manager position itself as regards cost? And what about the sharing of data if it helps others to reduce their carbon footprint? There is no better time to be in shipping, given the focus on sustainability, efficiency, performance metrics, and fuels. Eaglestar has left the fold at MISC, the Malaysian energy shipping business, and is finding its way in the exciting, yet intensely competitive world of third-party management. In this podcast, Managing Director and CEO Capt Peter Liew Guan Hock discusses Eaglestar’s journey to independence, its aspirations, and the importance of training seafarers to handle the new fuels. He emphasises the importance of future-proofing all aspects of the business as well as the employees because the only constant in shipping is change itself. The rapid advance of new technologies is often seen as a challenge, he says, although he sees new opportunities. Eaglestar wants to be seen as a one-stop-shop in energy ship management, working with its partners in design, construction, delivery, and operation of some of the most advanced vessels afloat. Capt Liew and his team are pushing boundaries at a time when those boundaries are still being defined by regulators and governments, technology leaders, environmentalists and indeed by society at large. Data is key; collaboration will be critical; people – including seafarers – will be paramount.