Port Klang container volume down
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Container traffic through Port Klang, the country’s busiest container port, fell by 8.3 per cent last year, as the global economic downturn continues to hurt the country’s exports, Business Times reported.
The port handled 7.3 million TEUs, compared with 7.9 million TEUs in 2008.
In terms of tonnage handled, traffic through the port was 133.8 million tonnes, down 8.8 percent over the previous year.
More than half, or 61 percent of the container volume, was from Westports, which generated 4.5 million TEUs. Northport accounted for the remaining 39 percent or 2.9 million TEUs.
Transhipment cargo took the largest share of Port Klang’s total throughput, contributing 58 percent, with local boxes constituting the remaining 42 percent .
However, transhipment volume also saw a nine percent drop to 4.3 million TEUs for the 12 months.
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China’s ports saw a 2.6 percent year-on-year decrease in container traffic in October, handling 10.78 million TEUs, according to Transport Ministry date, reported All data Processing. Container traffic at sea ports totalled 9.67 million TEUs, slipping 2.7 percent on the year. The port of Shanghai recorded the biggest volume but also the
Malaysian ports handled 10 percent more containers in the second quarter of the year compared to the first, reflecting a recovery in both domestic and transhipment cargo, the Business Times reported. Container traffic at the 10 major ports rose to 3.79 million TEUs from 3.44 million in the periods reviewed. Transhipment traffic,
China’s ports saw a 2.6 percent year-on-year decrease in container traffic in October, handling 10.78 million TEUs, according to Transport Ministry date, reported All data Processing. Container traffic at sea ports totalled 9.67 million TEUs, slipping 2.7 percent on the year. The port of Shanghai recorded the biggest volume but
Shanghai’s container throughput this year may drop 14 percent from 2008 to around 24 million TEUs according to preliminary estimates, the Shanghaiy Daily reported. The city’s container traffic is expected to be lower than last year’s 28 million TEUs, Wang Hongquan, vice director of Shanghai Transport and Port Authority, said. Shanghaiy’s
Shanghai’s container throughput this year may drop 14 percent from 2008, a government official said yesterday. The city’s container throughput in 2009 will be about 24 million TEUs (twenty foot equivalent units) according to a preliminary estimate by the port authority, lower than last year’s 28 million TEUs, Wang Hongquan,
Hong Kong-based terminal operator COSCO Pacific saw volume at 20 global ports in which it has stakes fall 4.8 percent in August, to 3.9 million TEUs. For the year, the company’s volume has fallen 7.7 percent, to 27.9 million TEUs. COSCO’s terminals in Qingdao and Dalian in northeastern China continued to
Container throughput at India’s largest container port, Jawaharlal Nehru, fell 7 percent in the April-July period compared with a year ago, amid the continuing slump in the country’s foreign trade. Box traffic during the first four months of fiscal 2009-10 declined to 1.13 million 20-foot equivalent units from 1.4 million TEUs,
The port of Singapore’s October container throughput rose 7.9 percent month-on-month to 2.31 million TEUs after a 5.8 percent dip in September, suggesting the slow uptick in the container sector is managing to hold, Business Times Singapore reported. At dominant port operator PSA, a 7.7 per ent month-on-month rise to
Shipments through Phnom Penh Autonomous Port were up for the fourth straight month in October, Xinhua reported. The port handled 3,682 TEUs last month, 8.61 percent more than the 3,390 TEUs handled in October 2008. Container throughput grew 22.7 percent year on year in September to 4,484 TEUs, and 22.65 percent
Container traffic at major ports in India fell 6 percent in the April-October period, the first seven months of fiscal 2009-10, despite a 3.6-percent increase in overall tonnage. The country’s 12 gateway hubs handled 3.9 million 20-foot equivalent units compared with 4.1 million TEUs during the same period the previous fiscal
JURONG Port said yesterday its container throughput in September fell 32.63 per cent to 64,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), from 95,000 TEUs a year earlier. But September’s figure was about 8.5 per cent higher than that in August, when the port handled 59,000 TEUs. August’s throughput was down 33 per cent
Container traffic at major ports in India fell 6 percent in the April-October period, the first seven months of fiscal 2009-10, despite a 3.6-percent increase in overall tonnage. The country’s 12 gateway hubs handled 3.9 million 20-foot equivalent units compared with 4.1 million TEUs during the same period the previous
In the first two months of this year the throughput of the First Container Terminal (FCT, St. Petersburg) amounted to 156.196 TEUs, 25.4% up from the same period a year earlier.
Container throughput at the Port of Singapore last month suggests that the slowdown in trade seems to be bottoming out and perhaps easing, Maritime and Port Authority figures show. Container throughput rose 5.6 per cent month-on-month in July to 2.22 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), from 2.1 million TEUs in June. However,
Kolkata Dock System (KDS) handled a record 34,287 TEUs of container traffic in July 2009, according to The Economic Times. This is the largest number of container shipments handled in a single month at the Kolkata docks, eclipsing the previous high of 33,219 TEUs in June 2009. Significantly, during April-July, 2009, KDS
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