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    Surging India-US trade leads MSC to boost capacity

    来源:Shipping News Headlines    编辑:编辑部    发布:2021/08/17 10:39:29

    MEDITERRANEAN Shipping Co (MSC) is revamping its service network between India and the US, adding a new string and revising its two existing loops, amid a widespread shortage of vessel space and equipment across all US-bound trade lanes, reports IHS Media.

    The Geneva-based container carrier will commence the weekly Indus 2 service August 30 from Mundra with eight vessels of around 8,500 TEU in capacity, according to a customer advisory. In addition to Mundra, the Indus 2 will stop at Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT) in India and Gioia Tauro and Sines in the Mediterranean before calling at Norfolk, Baltimore, Miami, and Freeport, Bahamas.

    The service brings a new weekly call to the Port of Baltimore at a time when gateways across the US are under pressure from a seemingly unending stream of imports from Asia and exporters in India are finding it increasingly difficult to secure capacity and containers to get their goods out of the country.

    "There is a need for utilisation of more gateways like Baltimore to land cargo in the United States," William P Doyle, executive director of the Maryland Port Authority, said. "Import/export demand for containerised cargo has substantially increased over the past year, and with that, port congestion is at an all-time high."

    Mr Doyle said Baltimore has served 23 extra loaders - ad hoc vessel sailings not associated with a regular liner service - over the past year.

    "Baltimore is a prime gateway for containers filled with goods heading to the e-commerce market and also for cargo sent to the Midwest via rail," he said, adding that the port expects to see strong demand for exports on the backhaul to India as well.

    Juan M Kuryla, director and CEO of PortMiami, said the new Indus 2 loop "recognises India's growing international trade in the region," noting that India is already Miami's third-largest trading partner in Asia.

    US containerised imports from India grew 270 per cent year over year to 525,524 TEU in the first half of 2021 and 30.2 per cent compared with the same six-month period in pre-pandemic 2019, according to data from PIERS.

    To accommodate the new service, MSC will drop calls at Gioia Tauro, Norfolk, Freeport, La Spezia, and King Abdullah Port from its existing Indusa loop and add a westbound call at Barcelona, leaving the service with a revised rotation of Mundra, JNPT, Colombo, Barcelona, Valencia, Sines, New York-New Jersey, Savannah, Charleston, and Mundra.

    MSC will also remove a call at Charleston from the Indus Express and add a westbound call at Marsaxlokk, Malta, leaving a rotation of Port Khalifa (Abu Dhabi), Jebel Ali, Port Qasim, JNPT, Mundra, Haifa, New York-New Jersey, Savannah, Houston, Freeport (Bahamas), Marsaxlokk, King Abdullah Port, and back to Port Khalifa.

    "All three services will operate as standalone MSC services, offering competitive transit times from the Middle East and Indian subcontinent region to the US East Coast and Gulf," the carrier said. "Our US customers benefit from the possibility to import cargo from anywhere in India, boosting predictability for effective supply chain planning."

    However, despite the additional capacity, shippers shouldn't expect any relief from rising India-US freight rates. MSC has instituted a US$2,000 per container general rate increase (GRI) on India-US routes from August 15, followed by a $2,500 per container peak season surcharge and another $800 per TEU GRI on September 1.

    MSC (India) said in a statement the rate hikes are necessary to "maintain the high level of reliability and efficiency of its services to meet the customer needs."



    Brisbane trade increases 7.5pc in June to 119,200 TEU

    THE Port of Brisbane posted a 7.5 per cent year-on-year increase in June container volume to 119,200 TEU, reported Daily Cargo News (formerly Lloyd's List Australia).

    Laden containers accounted for 79,297 TEU, an increase of 3.7 per cent. Empties came to 31,715 TEU, an increase of 14.6 per cent.

    Transshipped container throughput at the port increased 21.6 per cent to 8,187 TEU. While this was a significant jump in percentage terms, an increase of just 1,452 TEU.

    Imported boxes fell one per cent to 53,596 TEU. Empties dropped 140 per cent to 4971 TEU this year. FAK imports increased 96 per cent to 4,697 TEU.

    Turning to exports, the port's largest export commodity by far was fresh Queensland air. A total of 26,744 TEU of empty containers crossed the wharves at Brisbane over the month - that's 46.6 per cent of the port's total containerised exports (which totalled 57,417 TEU).