Shipping
Port of Savannah achieves third month of over half-million TEUs
Port of Savannah achieves third month of over half-million TEUs
CMA CGM names Esra Bora as new general manager in China
Maersk halts port calls at Haifa citing threat risks
First mega-boxship transits the Suez Canal in 15 months
ONE adds 13,900 TEU vessel to fleet
Freightos: Iran-Israel conflict not impacting freight yet
CMA CGM says shipping activities ‘proceeding as normal’ in the Middle East
Sea-Intel: Niche carriers seizing Transpacific opportunity again
Hong Kong marks first SIMOPS LNG bunkering at Modern Terminals
Tariffs put brake on cargo volume growth at Port of Los Angeles
MPA, NYK Group expand autonomous ship trials
PSA International joins Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation
Chengdu-Shenzhen-Hong Kong rail-sea service launches
Global schedule reliability continues to increase in 2025
Sea-Intel: Major ocean carriers profitability around US$5.9B in Q1 2024
Gebrüder Weiss expands into Thailand
DP World, VIMC Lines launch domestic coastal logistics service
Singapore, France ink enhanced maritime partnership agreement
CMA CGM launches first fully-electric container barge in Vietnam
MSC container ship sinks off India coast
Port of Savannah container trade up 17% in April
DP World to launch US$2.5B logistics infrastructure investment in 2025
Port of Long Beach sees record April, warns of sharp May drop amid tariff impact
Suez Canal introduces rebates to regain containership traffic
CMA CGM warns extended China-US tariffs could disrupt global trade
U.S. slashes ‘de minimis’ tariff on small China parcels to 30%
LA, Long Beach ports warn of continued tariff uncertainty
China-US deescalation may spur early peak season
Yang Ming: US-China trade deal may spur demand, but uncertainty persists
US-China tariff pause offers temporary relief, could fuel another frontloading rush
Transpacific shipping faces capacity cuts as trade war escalates
Houthi ceasefire raises prospect of container traffic returning to Red Sea
Kale Logistics to develop Oman's national port community system
PSA BDP takes majority stake in Mexico’s ED Forwarding
Xeneta: ‘Ships for America Act’ adds more uncertainty to container shipping market
JAFZA marks 40 years with record US$190B in trade
Seafrigo expands multi-modal services to support global expansion
US port fees to have minimal impact on Transpacific niche carriers
Port fo NY/NJ is busiest US port in March
S&P: Liner shipping contributes US$1.1T to U.S. GDP
deugro Thailand delivers critical reactors for sustainable fuel production
Emirates Shipping Line joins World Shipping Council
Japanese shipyards may benefit from US port fees on Chinese vessels
MOL opens office in Washington, D.C.
Red Sea disruptions push shipping carbon emissions to record high in 2024
Port of LA expects a double-digit volume decline in the second half amid tariffs
DP World sources 65% of its electricity from renewables in 2024
Hapag-Lloyd: 30% of China’s US-bound shipments canceled
Port of Antwerp-Bruges says impact of US tariffs minimal for now
COSCO says planned US port fees threaten shipping, global supply chains
Yang Ming extends lease at Kaohsiung Port, acquires new containers
Transpacific sees surge in blank sailings amid escalating tariffs
UNCTAD: Global economic growth may slow to 2.3% amid mounting pressures
Port of Long Beach becomes the busiest U.S. port in Q1
IMO approves net-zero regulations for global shipping
India ends transshipment facility for Bangladesh exports
US softens stance on proposed port fees for Chinese vessels
Adani’s Colombo Terminal commences operations
Gemini shuttles hit 98% schedule reliability in February
Airfreight demand from China, Hong Kong to the US declines as rates rise
ZIM signs long-term charter deals for 10 LNG-powered 11,500-TEU vessels
Georgia Ports’ container trade grew 22.5% in March
CMA CGM inks AI deal with Mistral AI
Port of New York and New Jersey reports second-busiest February
Maersk's APM Terminals acquires Panama Canal Railway Company
ICS: Proposed US port fees on Chinese vessels to severely disrupt supply chains
INDONESIA OUTLINES PLANS TO BUILD WORLD CLASS PORTS
December 1, 2014
Jakarta traffic jam
Shippers face traffic delays and congestion between industry areas and the Port of Jakarta.

Sources have moved on a report outlining new initiatives to build a world class port network in Indonesia.

These were outlined by Hans Patuwo and Robert Carey, Partners at McKinsey and Company in an opinion piece for the Jakarta Post.

Improving domestic port operations and procedures – their first suggestion – is one of the “simplest and most effective ways to encourage a maritime transformation across Indonesia,” they argued.

This improvement, though, might be the hardest thing to do as it would require both a change of mindset and plenty of new port hardware goodies.

“There are so many stakeholders involved in the process of port transformation,” Henry Sandee, senior trade specialist with the World Bank in Jakarta, told Asia Cargo News.

“Plans to upgrade port performance and the status of the various initiatives are not clear. The newly-established coordinating minister for maritime affairs may be a step in the right direction to achieve more coordination,” he added.

One ticklish issue that remains unresolved – and therefore a constraint to further increases in port productivity – is the unclear division of tasks between port authorities and terminal operators. “In this area, the reform agenda needs to be strengthened,” Sandee said.

Another problem is the sheer lack of hardware; getting goods in and out of ports, both water- and landside, is a real problem.

For example, channel and road access in some Indonesian ports are still inadequate and create difficulties for exporters and importers as well as for shipping lines. This impacts efficiency and increases the overall logistics cost, says Jakob Friis Sorensen, president director of Maersk Line Indonesia.

A more candid view comes from a shipping line that spoke to Asia Cargo News on condition of anonymity. A representative notes that while the Port of Jakarta boasts good vessel turnaround time and productivity, the port also suffers from “rather expensive” stevedoring, especially considering the lower cost elsewhere in Asia, and very tight berth availability.

“Vessels that missed their berth windows will be delayed by minimum 48 hours before being allocated next berth,” the official said.

(Patuwo and Carey offered their own solution for this in their column: Fines should be imposed on ships that do not keep their allotted slot, as well as on the port if a schedule is not kept. “This would cut waiting times for ships at port and make a radical difference,” they wrote.)

Other concerns the shipping line flagged were yard congestion caused by long box dwelling times, heavy bottlenecks at terminal entry and exit gates and traffic delays and congestion between industry areas and the port.

There are a number of strategies shipping lines have to deal with this such as switching terminals. “We are adapting with the situation and limitations in different ports and carefully considering the type and size of vessels to deploy. We are closely monitoring the port developments in Jakarta and Surabaya, to assess the possibility for us to upsize our ships,” added Sorensen.

To reduce congestion at Tanjung Priok port, Maersk is using the Cikarang Dry Port terminal for shipments near the Cikarang industrial area east of Jakarta, he added.

Another key (double) reform advocated by Patuwo and Carey is investing in Indonesia’s domestic ports, especially in the growing cities outside Java, Indonesia’s main island and effective logistical hub. This, they acknowledge, will require increased regulatory support and clarity in order to attract the needed money.

To some extent, this is already happening. Plans are underway to build a new integrated port and industrial estate in Surabaya as well as a new container port in Jakarta to help ease the congestion at Tanjung Priok. The new Kalibaru port aims to open the first of its three new terminals in the middle of next year, which will offer a deeper draft.

“There’s still an uneven focus between development of ports in west and east Indonesia, with more emphasis placed on the west,” said Soresen. “This will be a task for the new government to look into.”

Maersk is already doing its bit and is shipping from eastern Indonesia at Bitung; it is the first overseas shipping service to call at Bitung port, said Sorensen. The line offers service to its main transshipment hub at the Port of Tanjung Pelepas in Johor, Malaysia.

“We see opportunities in increasing exports out of the eastern part of Indonesia and want to support the development of this area with a direct service to our main transshipment hub, connecting exporters to global markets,” he said.

 

By Michael Mackey

Southeast Asia Correspondent | Bangkok