Provisions get the attention, but spare parts are where marine maintenance budgets quietly haemorrhage. A single wrong-part delivery can idle a vessel, trigger an air-freight bill that dwarfs the part itself, and cascade into off-hire claims. Yet spares procurement is often the least systematic part of a fleet's purchasing. Here is how to fix that.
Why Spares Procurement Is So Painful
- Identification is precise and unforgiving. A pump impeller is defined by maker, model and a specific part number — get one digit wrong and you receive a part that physically will not fit.
- Demand is unpredictable. You cannot fully plan when a bearing fails or a sensor dies.
- Lead times are long. Genuine maker parts can take weeks, and the vessel may be moving between ports the whole time.
Get the Identification Right
The single highest-leverage habit is disciplined part identification. Always order against:
- The maker's name and equipment model;
- The maker part number from the machinery manual or parts catalogue;
- The position/drawing reference where applicable;
- An IMPA code for standardised consumables (filters, gaskets, fasteners).
A photo of the worn part and its nameplate, attached to the requisition, prevents more wrong-part deliveries than any amount of text.
Planned vs Urgent: Manage the Two Streams Separately
Planned spares follow the maintenance schedule — order them early, consolidate by port, and use sea freight. Urgent spares are breakdowns — here speed beats price, and a supplier network that can source locally or expedite air freight is worth a premium. The mistake is treating everything as urgent (you overpay) or everything as planned (you get caught short). Tag every requisition as one or the other.
Genuine vs OEM-Equivalent
For critical, class-related and warranty-bound equipment, genuine maker parts are non-negotiable. For non-critical consumables, quality OEM-equivalent parts can cut cost substantially — provided the supplier can document specification and material compliance. Decide your policy per equipment criticality, and write it down so it is applied consistently.
Build a Supplier Network, Not a Single Source
Spares availability is geographic. The supplier who can deliver a part in Rotterdam may have nothing in Durban. Maintaining a network of vetted suppliers across your trading region — and the ability to put one requisition in front of several of them at once — is the difference between a four-hour fix and a four-day wait.
The Procurement Checklist
- Identify precisely — maker, model, part number, photo;
- Classify — planned or urgent;
- Quote multiple verified suppliers in the relevant port;
- Confirm lead time and Incoterm before ordering, not after;
- Inspect on delivery against the part number, not just the description.
The GDS platform lets a vessel send one spare-parts requisition — with codes and photos attached — to multiple verified suppliers across ports, then compare price and lead time side-by-side. Register your fleet to take control of spares procurement.