Japan IT Week 2024 Brochure by 47Billion (English)
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Regional and Feeder Port Implications of Cascade Effects
1. Cascade Effects in Container Shipping
Implication for Regional and Feeder Ports
Portek International Limited
Larry Lam, Chairman
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2.
3. What we do
Portek is both a
provider of equipment, services
and solutions to ports worldwide,
& an
operator of medium sized ports.
4. What we do
β’ As provider to ports:
β Modernize Port Equipment β upgrading
equipment from PX to PPX, turnkey
β Quick deployment of cranes to meet
surge in traffic; sale or lease
β Crane accidents recovery & repairs
β Port IT & Automation modules
β Traffic studies, marketing program to
attract traffic, simulations
5.
6. What we do
β’ As port operator:
β T009 & T300 (Jakarta, Indonesia)
β Bejaia Mediterranean Terminal
(Algeria)
β Valetta Gateway Terminal (Malta)
β Port of Libreville & Port Gentil ( Gabon)
10. The Trend
12,500
7,200
4,500
3,000
1980 1990 2000 2006
Maximum Vessel Size
11. The Trend
β’ By end of 2007, there were 188
Vessels of greater than 10 000
TEUs on order
β’ By 2011, Post Panamax Vessels
will contribute 50% of all
container slots
12. Definitions
β’ Mid Panamax MPX ~ 2000 β 3500 TEUs
β’ Large Panamax LPX ~ 3500+ β 4500 TEUs
β’ Post Panamax PPX ~ 4500+ β 6000 TEUs
β’ Large Post Panamax LPPX
~ 6000+ β 8000 TEUs
β’ Super Post Panamax SPPX (Mega Ships)
~ 8000+ β 12500 TEUs
15. World Container Fleet
Supply
β’ Order book of 6.9 million TEU with
an average ship size of 4,500 TEU.
β’ Existing world fleet is only 11.8 TEU,
with an average ship size of less
than 3,000 TEU.
23. What are the implications?
β’ More consolidation, M&A in the regional
and feeder trades?
β’ Slot sharing, gradual exit of smaller
ships?
β’ Increase in fuel cost will further
accentuate the cost difference
β’ Ship call frequency decrease due to
larger ships and bigger loads
β’ Reduced port calls, as port with low load
factor will be dropped out
25. Regional Ports & Feeder
Ports
β’ Regional ports are ports serving
Intra-continent of Intra-regional
trades such as Intra-Asia trades, SE
Asia Trades
β’ Feeder ports are mainly those that
feed or receive cargo to and from a
regional port or a major hub port
26. Challenges for Regional and
Feeder Ports
β’ Questions confronting regional and
feeder ports:
β Are the (displaced) big ships coming to
your port?
β Are you pushed further into the feeder
trades?
β Which ports can be winners and which
may be bypassed?
27. The Future of Regional Ports
2,500 TEU ships 5,000 TEU ships
Some regional ports may emerge as
the regional hubs, and attract more
transshipment traffic
28. The Future of Feeder Ports
600 β 1,200 TEU ships 2,500 TEU ships
Feeder ports who cannot service larger
ships will be marginalized, they may
dropped as a port of call, will see reduced
frequency, and connectivity
29. Advantage = US$ 8 / TEU / day savings in slot cost
= US$ 48 for a voyage of 6 days
30. Winners and Losers
β’ For South East Asia:
β Tg Priok (Jakarta)?
β Manila, Laem Chabang?
β Port Klang?
β Cai Mep Port? With throughput in
Vietnam growing at 25% a year,
will Cai Mep be a winner?
31. River Ports VS. Sea Ports
β’ Cascade effect will tilt the
balance in favour of sea ports:
β Ho Chi Minh VS. Cai Mep
β Bangkok VS. Laem Chabang
β Ports along Yangtze VS. coastal
ports (Yangshan, Ningbo, etc.)
32. Winners and Losers
β’ For Indian subcontinent/ Arabian
Sea:
β Will Nhava Sheva emerge as a
major port of calls for Post
Panamax vessels?
β Karachi, Bandar Abbas
34. Challenges
β’ Insufficient cargo volume for new size
of ships
β’ Physical infrastructural constraints
β’ Equipment constraints
β’ IT & communication system constraints
β’ Administrative issues β bureaucratic
red tape, labour management issues,
custom inspection, adopt best
practices
35. Cargo Volume Constraints
β’ There must be sufficient cargo or
load factor for the ship to justify
making a call.
β’ Regional Ports must:
β Expand its hinterland; seize initiatives
to be a gateway port for the country,
and neighboring countries.
β Attracting transshipment traffic
β Stimulate a more balanced trade
39. Equipment Constraints
β’ Panamax Quay Crane
β Lift Height (26 m 30 β 32 m)
β Outreach (12 β 13 rows 14 β 15
rows)
β Crane speeds β possible to increase
incrementally
40. Equipment Constraints
β’ Panamax Quay Crane
β Drive change β improve reliability,
parts absolescence
β General refurbishment β better cabin
ergonomics, greater safety as in
braking systems, etc.
β Twin lift 2 X 20β can be incorporated
without major change in operating
procedures
45. Equipment Constraints
β’ Yard Equipment
β RTG height of 1 over 4 (or 1 over 3) to
1over 5 or 1over 6
β Yard space is at a premium
β Straddle carriers of 1 over 2
configuration are being phased out in
favour of 1 over 3
53. Administrative Issues
β’ Streamlining customs procedure and
documentation flow β many ports in
developing countries have time
consuming custom inspection, and
complicated documentation,
resulting in a dwell time of
containers
54. Administrative Issues
β’ Dealing with Bureaucracy - state owned
ports slow to respond to customer needs,
cumbersome procurement process, not
able to gear up quickly to handle
increased traffic
β’ Labour issues - Some unionized labour
force continuing with outdated work
practices, resist changes and new
technology
56. Conclusion: Mega Hub and
Regional Port
β’ Big ships reinforce the hub and
spoke pattern of shipping, favoring
mega hub ports
β’ Some regional ports will be winners
and emerge as regional hubs. Many
will be bypassed
57. Conclusion: Feeder Ports
and Feeder Shipping
β’ Feeder ports face pressure as feeder
vessels scale up. Failure to cope means:
high freight costs, low connectivity and
becoming less relevant
β’ Further shake-out in regional and feeder
shipping through mergers and
acquisitions. Smaller ships of less than
1000 TEU size will retreat to marginal or
niche routes or to domestic, inter-island
routes