• TPM25
  • March 2-5, 2025 | Long Beach Convention Center

Tom Behrens-Sørensen

ECCO Global Shoe Production

Chairman

Professional board member, senior advisor and venture capital investor with more than 20 years of global C-suite experience. High performance track record in maritime, logistics and other industry sectors across multiple cultures in emerging markets.

Extensive leadership experience in successfully building, scaling and managing diverse industry leading businesses in Asia, notably China and India. Built a USD 7 billion business in China.

A transformational leader with entrepreneurial flair, mastering coding and decoding of strategy in high growth, complex and highly regulated environments.

Very experienced China advisor and thought leader with deep insights into industrial landscapes and extensive relationships with both Government and the private sector.

Very experienced in developing high performing organizations and C-suite leaders having consistently over the years groomed high potential talent into senior executives.

Specialties: Strategy, Organisational Excellence, Emerging Markets (China & India), Performance Enhancement, Change Management, Government Relations, M&A, Family Business, Venture Capital, Start Ups.

Sessions With Tom Behrens-Sørensen

Monday, 3 March

  • 04:00pm - 04:45pm (PST) / 04/mar/2025 12:00 am - 04/mar/2025 12:45 am

    Trade Lane Focus: Is Relief in Sight for Asia-Europe Shippers

    Red Sea shipping diversions will dominate shipper-carrier relationships on the Asia-Europe trade lane through 2025 and hamper the on-time performance of ships at ports on both ends of the corridor. The Houthi attacks that removed the Red Sea as an Asia-Europe option in late 2023 came as an unpleasant surprise for shippers, and a welcome relief for oversupplied carriers, but the container shipping industry will go into 2025 with the longer voyages now baked into ocean schedules. That, unfortunately, doesn’t translate into improved on-time performance with both Asia-North Europe and Asia-Mediterranean trade lanes recording schedule reliability of less than 50% for much of 2024, according to Sea-Intelligence. Even as demand began to slow in the last quarter of 2024, ports in Europe and Asia were reporting a significant increase in congestion and carriers were struggling with equipment shortages. Carriers have penciled in a return to the Red Sea for the second half and some analysts are using that as a baseline for their market outlooks, but the reality is that no one knows. Should the midyear prediction be correct, it will immediately see an estimated 10% of excess capacity soaked up by the diversions around Africa returned to the market, creating chaos at overrun ports and putting downward pressure on rates. Still, the excess capacity may not be as severe as initially thought, with ocean carriers pulling hard on capacity management levers such as slow steaming, scrapping and blanking sailings to limit the supply overhang. Demand also is expected to slow with Europe’s major economies facing uncertainty over persistent core inflation, policy directions and geopolitical conflicts that are dampening the near-term outlook. In this unclear environment, a panel of industry experts will discuss what lies ahead for Asia-Europe and the lessons learned from a volatile year that cargo owners can draw on to shape their 2025 approach to the trade lane.