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ANEK Lines

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ANEK Lines
AthexANEK
IndustryShipping
Transport
FoundedApril 10, 1967; 57 years ago (1967-04-10)[1]
FounderIrineos Galanakis[citation needed]
FateMerged with Attica Group[2]
Headquarters,
Greece[1]
Area served
Adriatic Sea
Crete
Aegean islands
Italy
Aegean Sea
Key people
Georgios Katsanevakis (President)
Yannis Vardinoyiannis (CEO)[1][3]
ProductsCommercial, Passenger Transport and Cargo
Revenue149.99 million (2021[4])
17.04 million (2021[4])
(40.70) million (2021[4])
Total assets280.91 million (2021[4])
Total equity(40.48) million (2021[4])
Number of employees
670 (2021)
Subsidiaries
  • Aigaion Pelagos Thalassies Grammes Shipping Company
  • ANEK Holdings (99.32%)
  • ANEK Lines Italia (49%)
  • ETANAP (31.9%)
  • Lefka Ori (48.24%)
[5][4]
Websitewww.anek.gr
Footnotes / references
source for financial figure:[6]

ANEK Lines (Ανώνυμη Ναυτιλιακή Εταιρεία Κρήτης, Anonymi Naftiliaki Eteria Kritis, Anonymous Shipping Company of Crete) is one of the largest passenger shipping companies in Greece.[citation needed] It was founded in 1967 by numerous shareholders who were inhabitants of Crete.[citation needed] It operates passenger ferries, mainly on the Piraeus–Crete and Adriatic Sea routes.

In December 2023, ANEK Lines was acquired by Attica Group,[2] continuing operations as the fourth cruise line subsidiary of Attica Group.

History

[edit]
F/B Elyros
H/S/F Hellenic Spirit

In Crete protests broke out after the Typaldos Lines car ferry SS Heraklion capsized due to a series of safety regulations violations. The ship sank on her way from Chania to Piraeus on 8 December 1966, resulting in the death of more than 200 people.[citation needed]

In the aftermath, a few hundred Cretans (traders, free-lancers, pensioners, farmers), following a proposal by the Association of Economists of the Chania Prefecture with the support of the Metropolitan of Kissamos and Selinos, and Irineos Galanakis, implemented their idea to found a multi-shareholder shipping company.[7][failed verification]

Therefore, on

  • 1967 - 10 April, ANEK Lines was founded with its head offices located at Chania. At the beginning only born Cretans could hold stocks in ANEK Lines.[citation needed]
  • 1970 The company's first F/B vessel Kydon started servicing the route Piraeus-Chania
  • 1973 The F/B's Candia and Rethymo started servicing the route Piraeus-Iraklion
  • 1978 The F/B Kriti started daily servicing the route Piraeus-Chania[7]
  • 1987 The F/B Apterastarted servicing the route Piraeus-Chania
    • New route Crete-Thessaloniki started (route closed then suddenly)[8]
  • 1989 The F/B's Lato and Lissos started servicing the route Patras-Corfu/Igoumenitsa-Ancona[7]
    • New blue-yellow corporate identity introduced[7]
    • The F/B Kydon was sold.
  • 1992 ANEK Lines new flagship the F/B El. Venizelos started servicing the route Greece-Italy.
    • F/B Talos started servicing the route Patras-Trieste
  • 1994 New route opened, Patras-Igoumenitsa-Bari, but already ceased the following year[8]
  • 1997 The F/B's Kriti I & Kriti II started new nonstop Patras-Ancona service[8]
  • 1998 Share-capital increase and initial public offering (IPO) for the company's stocks in the Athens Stock Exchange
    • F/B "Sokofles V" starts operating the route to Northern Italy (Patras-Trieste)[7]
    • Take over some stakes in DANE[8]
  • 1999 The company's stocks started trading on the Athens Stock Exchange on 21 January 1999
    • ANEK Lines purchases 50% of the share-capital of LANE (Ag. Nikolaos), with the assignment of the F/B Talos.
    • ANEK Lines merge with RETHYMNIAKI and integrate their ships F/B Prevelis and F/B Arkadi into the fleet
    • ANEK Lines ITALIA s.r.l.was founded. ANEK Lines holds 51% of its shares
    • ANEK Lines buys 16.5% of NEL Lines[9]
    • ANEN was founded. ANEK Lines holds 20% of its shares
F/B Lefka Ori
F/B Kriti II
  • 2000 The F/B Lefka Ori was purchased, fully renovated and started servicing the route Patras-Ancona.
    • ANEK Lines increase its shares to 41,9% of the share-capital of DANE
    • ANEK Lines buys 50% of the share-capital of ETANAP
    • ANEK Lines buys 62% of the share-capital of LEFKA ORI A.B.E.E.
    • Contract signed with the Norwegian shipyard Fosen Mek Shipyard for the shipbuilding of two new buildings (first time for ANEK) with delivery dates October 2000 and May 2001 with an option for two more.
    • Delivery of the newly constructed Olympic Champion servicing the route Patra - Ancona which completes the route Igoumenitsa - Ancona in 15 hours.
    • ANEK Lines increases its share-capital (25% = 9.5 billion drachmas / 27.88 million EUROs)
    • The F/B's Candia and Rethymno are sold
    • ANEK Lines increases its share-capital in NEL to 19.05%
  • 2001 Established online connections to the international booking systems START, MERLIN, AMADEUS and SIGMA
    • Delivery of the second newly constructed H/S/F Hellenic Spirit servicing along with the H/S/F Olympic Champion the route Patra - Igoumenitsa - Ancona reducing the travelling time from Igoumenitsa - Ancona to 15 hours.
  • The former Patras-Ancona operating ships, Kriti I and Kriti II, were deployed then on Patras-Triest and Ravena-Catania (Kriti I)[8]
  • 2002 The F/B's Kriti I & Kriti II deployed on the Piraeus-Heraklion service[8]
  • 2003 ANEK Lines set up a ro/ro operations called ANEK CARGO for the routes Piraeus–Heraklion, Patras–Bari and Patras–Venice[8]
  • 2005 in May ANEK sold its 16.5% shares in NEL Lines to Edgewater Holdings with a €0.5 million profit[10]
    • in November the F/B Aptera was sold with a €2.5 million net profit[10]
    • the new Patras-Venice route is added to the route to Northern Italy[7]
    • the construction of the company's building is completed as well as the relocation of administrative services to the company-owned, functional establishment in Chania(Karamanli avenue former Souda Avenue)[7]
  • 2007 in February the company's latest establishment in Piraeus is inaugurated, housing the Directorate of Commercial Exploitation, the Directorate of Technical Services and the Piraeus main agency[7]
  • 2008 in April the P/S-F/S Prevelis entered service on the Piraeus-Paros-Naxos-Ios-Santorini line[7]
    • in July 2008 the P/S-F/S Lissos entered service between Piraeus and Chios-Mytilini[7]
    • in September 2008 the P/S-F/S Elyros entered service between Piraeus and Chania[7]
    • in December 2008 ANEK was awarded a prize as "The Best Passenger Line of the Year 2008" during the 5th Greek Shipping Awards ceremony hosted by Lloyd's List[7]
  • 2010 April, ANEK established a new subsidiary AIGAION PELAGOS THALASSIES GRAMMES SHIPPING COMPANY (Chania), to charter and operate the east Aegean and specifically the Piraeus-Syros-Mykonos-Ikaria-Fourni–Samos route and in September this new company undertook the Heraklion route which it is servicing by chartering Parent Company's vessels[11]
  • 2011 1 June, ANEK Lines started a 3-year joint service agreement with Attica Group (Superfast, Blue Star Ferries) for the route Patras–Igoumenitsa–Ancona and Piraeus–Irakleion under the name ANEK-Superfast. Therefore, ANEK deploy its ferry Olympic Champion from the Ancona service (now a joint venture operations with ANEK's Lefka Ori and the Superfast VI and XI) to the Irakleio service (now a joint venture operations with Superfast XII).[7]
  • 2012 14 June, F/B Lato deployed in the international line Bari–Durrës in cooperation with Adriatica Lines for the summer season.
  • 2014 F/B Ierapetra L. deployed in the international line Bari–Durrës in charter from ANEK Italia for year-round service. A major engine-room fire on 29 November 2014 when underway with crew only aboard caused substantial damage to the ship which returned to Brindisi Italy. No injuries or fatalities occurred. The vessel is currently out of operation.[12]
  • 2014 Due to the 2014 Libyan conflict, Libya's House of Representatives has been housed on the ANEK's ferry Elyros which has been moored off the coast of Tobruk in eastern Libya.[13]
  • 2015 ANEK operates the Sophocles V as Kydon on the Piraeus-Chania. The Olympic Champion returns to the Adriatic, and the El. Venizelos operates in the Northern Aegean in order to transport Syrian refugees arriving in Chios and Lesvos.

Fleet

[edit]

The ANEK Lines fleet is composed of eight motor Ro-Ro/passenger ferries, of which six are in use and two are laid up.

Ship name Flag Built IMO Gross tonnage Length Width Passengers Vehicles Knots Image
Prevelis Greece 1980 8020927 15,354 GT 142.5 m 23,5 m 927 310 19
rebuilt ferry, originally built by Imbari Zosen, Imbari, Japan. Named after Monastery of Preveli.
El. Venizelos Greece 1984 7907673[14] 38,261 GT 175.5 m 28.5 m 2,500 850 21
Former Kydon II, large rebuilt ferry, with hull build in Stocznia im, Komuny Paryskiej, Gdynia Poland, completed in 1992 at Perama, Piraeus, Greece for Piraeus - Crete routes; similar to Stena Line's Stena Vision and Stena Spirit as well as the unfinished Regent Sky. Named after Chanian politician and former Prime Minister of Greece, Eleftherios Venizelos.[15]
Asterion II Cyprus 1991 8922163 31,804 GT 192 m 27 m 720 840 21.5
Former Ishikari and Grand Spring, transferred from Superfast Ferries.
Kissamos Greece 1992 9035876 29,992 GT 192 m 27 m 1,790 780 24 Kissamos Piraeus
Former Blue Galaxy, transferred from Blue Star Ferries.
Elyros Greece 1998 9178599[16] 33,635 GT 192 m 27 m 1,874 620 24
Rebuilt ferry, originally built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Shimonoseki, Japan for Piraeus - Chania route. Named after Elyrus.[17]
Hellenic Spirit Greece 2001 9216030[18] 32,694 GT 204 m 25.8 m 1,850 670 30
Former Kriti IV and Olympic Spirit, ferry build at Bruce Shipyard, Landskrona and equipped at Fosen Mekaniske Verksted, Rissa, Norway for Patras - Igoumenitsa - Ancona line.[19] It will soon be transferred to Superfast Ferries as Superfast IV.

Laid up

[edit]
Ship name Flag Built IMO Gross tonnage Length Width Passengers Vehicles Knots Image
Kriti I Greece 1979 7814046 27,239 GT 192 m 27 m 1,500 650 22
rebuilt ferry, originally built by Koyo Dockyard, Mihara, Japan. Named after Crete and now laid up in Perama.[20]
Kriti II Greece 1979 7814058 27,239 GT 192 m 29.4 m 1,500 719 23
Similar to Kriti I.[21]

Former Fleet

[edit]
  • Kydon 1968-1989 (scrapped)
  • Candia 1973-2000 (scrapped in 2011 as Jabal Ali 1)
  • Rethymnon 1973-2000 (scrapped in 2009 as Jabal Ali 2)
  • Zakros 1977-1985 (scrapped)
  • Kriti 1978-1996 (scrapped in 2004 as Express)
  • Aptera 1985-2005 (scrapped in 2011 as Morning Sun)
  • Lato 1987-2015 (scrapped in 2018 as Talaton)
  • Lissos 1987-2011 (scrapped in 2011 at Alang India)
  • Talos 1995-1999 as Ierapetra L 2008-2015 (as Aqua Blue for Seajets since 2016)
  • Arkadi 1999-2002 (sank as Pella for Arab Bridge Maritime Company at Red Sea in 2011)
  • Sophocles Venizelos 1999-2013 as Kydon for Anek Lines again
  • Lefka Ori 1999-2013 (as Blue Galaxy for Blue Star Ferries since 2015)
  • Coraggio 2012-2013 (as Athena Seaways for DFDS Seaways since 2013)
  • Forza 2012-2016 (as Forza for Acciona Transmediterranea since 2016)
  • Audacia 2013-2014 (as Rizhao Orient for a Chinese company since 2014)
  • Norman Atlantic 2014-2014 (caught fire on 28 December 2014 near Corfu. Laid-Up for 4 years in Bari scrapped in Aliaga in 2019)
  • Asterion 2016-2018 (as Connemara for Brittany Ferries since 2018)
  • Olympic Champion 2000-2023 now operates for Superfast Ferries as Superfast III

ANEK-Superfast

[edit]

On 7 June 2011 ANEK Lines and Superfast Ferries created a joint venture for the Piraeus-Heraklion and the Patra-Igoumenitsa-Ancona routes with two RO-PAX ships on the first route (the ANEK-owned Olympic Champion and the Superfast-owned Superfast XII) and three in the second route (the ANEK-owned Hellenic Spirit and the Superfast-owned Superfast VI and Superfast XI).[22]

Routes

[edit]

Affiliates

[edit]

ANEK Group comprises ANEK Lines, its subsidiaries, and companies in which it holds a minority stake greater than 10%:[failed verification]

  • ANEK HOLDINGS S.A. (Greece, Crete - Chania): 99.5% Tourism- participation in other companies- consulting, etc.[7]
  • ΑΝΕΚ LINES ITALIA srl (Italy, Ancona): 49%, Factoring and representation of shipping companies[7]
  • LANE S.A. (Lane Lines, Greece, Crete - Ag. Nikolaos):50.11%, Passenger ferry shipping[7]
  • AIGAION PELAGOS - THALASSIES GRAMMES SHIPPING COMPANY (Crete, Chania): 99.90%, Sailing company under Law 959/79[7]
  • T.C. SAILING (Greece, Crete - Chania): 97.5% Sailing company under Law 959/79[7]
  • ETANAP S.A. (Greece, Crete - Chania/Stylos): 50%, Production and distribution of bottled water[7]
  • LEFKA ORI S.A. (Greece, Crete - Chania/Stylos): 62%, Production and trade of plastic bottles and packaging products[7]
  • CHAMPION FERRIES L.T.D. (Marshal Island): 70%, Shipping[23]
  • Cooperative Bank of Chania: 0.01%[23]

Former affiliates and investments:

  • NEL Lines 16.5% (shares sold 2005 to Edgewater Holdings)[9]
  • DANE Sea Lines 41.87% (stop operations in August 2004 after financial difficulties)[24]

RETHYMNIAKI (took over and finally merged into ANEK Lines in 1999)[7] ANEN 19.36%[citation needed]

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

On 28 August 2018, at 23:45 (UTC+03:00), El. Venizelos, one of ANEK's fleet, caught fire soon after leaving Piraeus for Chania, with 875 passengers and 140 crew members on board. The ferry was able to return to Piraeus, with no injuries.[25]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "ANONYMI NAFTILIAKI ETAIREIA KRITIS AE". Retrieved 3 December 2023.
  2. ^ a b "ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΩΣΗ ΤΗΣ ΣΥΓΧΩΝΕΥΣΗΣ ΜΕ ΑΠΟΡΡΟΦΗΣΗ ΤΗΣ "ΑΝΩΝΥΜΗ ΝΑΥΤΙΛΙΑΚΗ ΕΤΑΙΡΕΙΑ ΚΡΗΤΗΣ Α.Ε." ΑΠΟ ΤΗΝ "ATTICA A.E. ΣΥΜΜΕΤΟΧΩΝ"" (PDF) (in Greek). Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  3. ^ "ΑΡΧΕΣ ΕΤΑΙΡΙΚΗΣ ΔΙΑΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗΣ". ANEK Lines (in Greek). Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "2021 Annual Financial Report" (PDF). anek.gr. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  5. ^ "ANEK Group". ANEK Lines. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  6. ^ "2017 Annual Financial Report" (PDF). anek.gr. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "ANEK Lines - Official Web Site". Anek.gr. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "ANEK Lines - Chania, Crete Island". Aegean.altervista.org. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  9. ^ a b FORTHnet eBusiness Services (28 August 1995). "NEL LINES | Ναυτιλιακή Εταιρεία Λέσβου". Nel.gr. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 31 December 2015. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  10. ^ a b ANEK Lines SA, 2005 annual report
  11. ^ ANEK Lines SA, 2010 Press Release Financial Results 2010, page 2
  12. ^ Paul Hancock (1 December 2014). "Ierapetra L". Shipwreck Log. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  13. ^ Goldhammer, Zach (13 September 2014). "On the Greek Ferry Housing Libya's Government". The Atlantic. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
  14. ^ "El.venizelos - Type of ship: Passenger ship - Callsign: SWWZ". Vesseltracker.com. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  15. ^ "M/S EL. VENIZELOS (1992)". www.faktaomfartyg.se. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  16. ^ "Elyros - Type of ship: Passenger ship - Callsign: SVOM". Vesseltracker.com. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  17. ^ "M/S SUN FLOWER TSUKUBA (1998)". www.faktaomfartyg.se. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  18. ^ "Fb Hellenic Spirit - Type of ship: Passenger ship - Callsign: SYOA". Vesseltracker.com. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  19. ^ "M/S HELLENIC SPIRIT (2001)". www.faktaomfartyg.se. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  20. ^ "M/S NEW SUZURAN (1979)". www.faktaomfartyg.se. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  21. ^ "M/S NEW YUKARI (1979)". www.faktaomfartyg.se. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  22. ^ "ANEK Lines Online Booking". ANEK-superfast.gr. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  23. ^ a b ANEK Lines, 2005 Annual Report, page 19
  24. ^ DANE Sea Lines Archived 27 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ "Μεγάλη κλίση στο "Ελευθέριος Βενιζέλος" ενώ οι φλόγες καίνε ακόμα στο γκαράζ (pics & vid)" (in Greek). Retrieved 2 September 2018.
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