Costamare


Costamare Inc. is a Marshall Islands corporation and one of the world's leading owners and providers of containerships for charter. Its headquarters are in Athens, Greece. Costamare Inc. has 37 years of history in the international shipping industry and a fleet of 56 containerships, with a total capacity of approximately 326,000 twenty foot equivalent units including 10 newbuild containerships on order.

Mission statement

The company’s strategy is to time-charter its containerships to a geographically diverse, financially strong and loyal group of leading liner companies. The containerships operate primarily under multi-year time charters and therefore are not subject to the effect of seasonal variations in demand.

History

The founders of Costamare Inc. have a long history of operating and investing in the shipping industry. The name “Costamare” was first used in the shipping industry in 1975 when Captain Vasileios Constantakopoulos, the father of the company’s chairman and chief executive officer, Konstantinos Constantakopoulos, founded Costamare Shipping Company S.A. to serve as the manager of the then existing fleet of ships directly or indirectly owned by the Constantakopoulos family

Historical Highlights

In 2000 it controlled 21 ships, in 2008, 53, and 43 in 2010. As of Oct 2018 it had 74 ships with 16 vessels in new or extended time charters. In 2010 it completed a US$159.6 million IPO to fund an expansion of its fleet
COSCO Guangzhou is a container ship, and one of the largest currently in service. Owned by Costamare and chartered to COSCO

Accidents and incidents

MV Rena

In October 2011 the MV Rena, which was being operated under charter by MSC, ran aground on the Astrolabe Reef near Tauranga, New Zealand. The resulting oil spill was labelled New Zealand's "worst ever environmental disaster". According to Costamare "the Captain was an experienced Master and had an exemplary record. The ship was fully certified and had been inspected by the Flag State and New Zealand Port State Control. They found no problems.
On 25 May 2012, the captain and navigation officer of the Rena at the time of the incident, appeared in Tauranga District Court for sentencing. Each was sentenced to 7 months imprisonment after being found guilty under the Maritime Transport Act for operating a vessel in a manner likely to cause danger, under the Resource Management Act for discharging a contaminant and three charges under the Crimes Act for willfully attempting to alter the course of justice by altering ship’s documents after the grounding.
Owners Daina Shipping, a subsidiary of Costamare, was reported to have spent 235million NZD on the salvage and cleanup operations.