Type | Private Company |
---|---|
Industry | Shipping |
Founded | 2008Lucena, Quezon Province | in
Founder | Victor Reyes |
Headquarters | No. 20, San Antonio Street, Lourdes Subdivision, Brgy. Isabang, Lucena, Quezon , |
Area served | Marinduque, Masbate, Quezon Province and, Romblon in the Philippines |
Key people | Merian Reyes Dominic Reyes |
Starhorse Shipping Lines, Inc. is a domestic shipping company based in Lucena City, Quezon, Philippines. It was established in 2008 by entrepreneur and politician Victor Reyes, who was a former board member in Quezon Province. It mainly serves the provinces of Marinduque, Masbate, Quezon, and Romblon and is one of the leading domestic shipping companies operating in the Calabarzon, Bicol, Visayas, and Mimaropa regions.
History
Starhorse Shipping Lines, Inc. (SSLI) was established in 2008 by entrepreneur and Quezon Province provincial board member Victor A. Reyes, who was previously the President of the defunct domestic shipping company Viva Shipping Lines, Inc. in the 1990s. SSLI is now being managed by Victor Reyes' wife, Merian Hernandez-Reyes, following Reyes' death in 2016.[1]
The company acquired two RORO ferries leased from the state-owned DBP Leasing Corporation and operated them initially in the Lucena City-Marinduque route. In the succeeding years, the Maritime Industry Authority eventually allowed the company to operate in other routes aside from the Lucena-Marinduque[2][3] and Lucena-Marinduque-Romblon route.[4] In 2018, the company commissioned the construction of two new vessels in Mokpo, South Korea, allowing it to operate additional routes such as the San Andres, Quezon-Pasacao, Camarines Sur-San Pascual, Masbate route.[1][5]
In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines, the company was one of several ferry companies that assisted the Philippine government in helping locally stranded individuals return to their provinces.[6]
Routes
As of April 2023, Starhorse Shipping Lines operates on the following routes:
Vessels
Starhorse Shipping Lines operates fourteen RORO vessels (Including the vessels from their sister company, Viva Peñafrancia Lines) as of December 2023. Some of these vessels were leased from DBP Leasing Corporation, while four were built by Moon-chang Shipbuilding Dockyard in Mokpo, South Korea:[7]
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia II (IMO number: 9233715)
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia V (IMO number: 9183659)
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia VII (IMO number: 9216327)
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia VIII (IMO number: 9880908)
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia IX (IMO number: 9380659)
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia X (IMO number: 8798512)
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia XI (IMO number: 9898591)
- MV Virgen de Peñafrancia XII (IMO number: 9952529)
- MV Viva Sto. Domingo (IMO number: 8793926)
- MV Viva Marian Queen (IMO number: 9916032)
References
- 1 2 Samonte, Mauro (15 February 2020). "Extortion on the waterfront". The Manila Times. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
- ↑ "Mga Biyahe ng Barko sa Marinduque, Tingnan". marinduquenews.com. 24 March 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
- ↑ Sto. Domingo, Adrian (29 November 2018). "Tagalog News: Starhorse Shipping Lines, magtataas ng pasahe simula Disyembre 10". Philippine Information Agency. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
- ↑ Fos, Paul Jaysent (19 April 2017). "Bagong barko ikokonekta na ang Romblon, Sibuyan, San Agustin, Banton, Marinduque, Lucena". romblonnews.net. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
- ↑ Estacio, Danny (12 February 2020). "No one hurt after an IED exploded after being hurled at RORO vessel in Masbate town". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
- ↑ Maritime Industry Authority (11 July 2020). "MARINA facilitates sea transport of LSIs back to their hometowns". marina.gov.ph. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
- ↑ "Annyeonghaseyo! Quezon Board Member Dominic Reyes flies to Korea to see two new ferries for Southern Luzon". southluzon.politics.com.ph. 23 August 2018. Retrieved 27 January 2021.