Pirates hijack U.S. bound oil tanker
A U.S.-bound oil tanker was hijacked by pirates off the coast of Somalia this morning. The incident occurred just hours after the Associated Press reported that Somali pirates have released a South Korean ship seized four months ago. David Gura reports how the costs of pirate attacks affect the global economy.
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JEREMY HOBSON: An oil tanker bound for the United States was hijacked by pirates this morning off the coast of Somalia. This comes just a day after pirates in the same area took control of an Italian tanker.
As Marketplace’s David Gura reports, this uptick in hijackings could impact all of us.
DAVID GURA: These attacks exact a big toll on the global economy. They cost up to $12 billion every year. And that ends up costing us more at the pump.
Tony McAuley is a managing editor at The Economist Intelligence Group.
TONY MCAULEY: I mean were talking about several million in ransom for some of these ships.
McAuley says that, aside from ransom, companies have to pay crews a lot more money because of safety fears. And insurance costs have gone up. In Europe, there’s been a big debate about how to increase security, and who is going to foot the bill. McAuley says that the only real solution has to come from Somalia, where many of these pirates are from.
MCAULEY: The pirates in places like Gurilway and Bossasa — the towns there are local heroes because there’s virtually no economy there. It’s a pastoral economy —
— in a country where there still isn’t a functioning government.
In Washington, I’m David Gura, for Marketplace.