Posted on 25 June 2012. Tags: Ahmad, Business Times, Cocktail Reception, Datuk Seri, Dewan Rakyat, Dred, Expansion Plans, Five Year Plan, Global Economy, Hilmi, Malaysia Plan, Net Profit, Penang, Ppsb, Sdn Bhd, Seaport Terminal Johor, Successful Company, Syed Mokhtar Al Bukhary, Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Al Bukhary, Transport Ministry
AWAITING CLEARER PICTURE: Management goes ahead with expansion plans and moves to improve net profit
WHILE the cloud of uncertainty continues to hover over the fate of Penang Port Sdn Bhd (PPSB), it’s business as usual for the management of the country’s oldest port.
“We are just as anxious as you are about the new owner and their plans for Penang Port,” said PPSB’s managing director Datuk Ahmad Ibnihajar last Friday before a cocktail reception for the port’s users. Also present was PPSB’s chairman Datuk Seri Dr Hilmi Yahaya.
Confirming a Business Times report that PPSB is yet to be officially notified that Seaport Terminal (Johor) Sdn Bhd, owned by tycoon Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar al-Bukhary, had won the bid to privatise the 226-year-old port, he said:
“We have read that the government is still negotiating with the new owner, but we remain in the dark as to what is exactly happening.
“In the meantime, it’s business as usual for us, as we go about with our plans to expand the port and better the net profit of RM15 milllion which we recorded last year,” he said.
While projecting a modest growth rate of between two per cent and three per cent for this year, Ahmad cautioned that if the global economy worsens, growth could remain flat.
The Transport Ministry, in a written reply at the Dewan Rakyat this month, had confirmed that Seaport Terminal had won the bid to privatise PPSB. The ministry said that one of the conditions to be included in the privatisation agreement was that the successful company must bear the cost of dredging Penang Port.
It was reported that the RM351 million dred-ging scheme for the northern part of the Penang channel has yet to take off although the amount had been allocated under the 10th Malaysia Plan. The project to deepen the channel from the current 11.5m to 14.5m is vital to bring large transshipments into the port.
“We have a five-year plan to improve the port’s performance,” Ahmad said, “and the new machines (seven units of Super Post-Panamax cranes), which are currently under-utilised because of the much needed capital dredging, is yet to be carried out.
“We are not worried about who the port’s new owner will be as all we want is to get on with our job of realising the best that Penang Port can offer and for the good of the state, we should all get on with business and the sooner the capital dredging can be carried out, the better.”
Ahmad also said that it was unfair to blame his staff on the port’s performance and compare it with other ports. “It has been a challenge for PPSB to manage the expectation of port users who have been wanting to see the port grow for a long time.”
Penang Port was incorporated in 1993 as a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Minister of Finance Inc. The management and operations of the port were corporatised in 1994 under the government’s privatisation programme, and Penang Port took over all the facilities and services from the Penang Port Commission (the regulatory body for the port) which licensed Penang Port to operate, manage and maintain all port facilities and services. The 30-year concession period ends in 2023.
By: Business Times
Posted in PULAU PINANG
Posted on 16 January 2010. Tags: Container Terminal, Containers, Crane, Cranes, Datuk Seri, Economic Downturn, Expansion Plans, Foot Equivalent Units, Four Months, Hilmi, New Projects, Penang, Post Panamax, Ppsb, Productivity, Sdn Bhd, Shipping Companies, Target, Terminal Operator, Yahaya
Terminal operator Penang Port Sdn Bhd (PPSB) plans to boost productivity this year, newly appointed chairman Datuk Seri Dr Hilmi Yahaya said yesterday.
Although shipping companies and ports were hit hard by the global economic downturn, Penang Port’s volume rose 3 per cent in 2009.
In a statement issued yesterday, Dr Hilmi said in 2009, Penang Port handled a total of 958,476 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) compared with 929,639 TEUs in 2008.
“Our main priorities now are to continually improve our productivity, provide a range of diverse supporting port services and monitor our expansion plans in great detail”, he said.
PPSB has embarked on several key projects.
“The first phase in the expansion of dedicated container terminal will include a new 600m wharf extension to the existing 900 metre wharf, with new decking area for export container. A third access bridge is under construction. Simultaneously, for the second part of this project, a new back decking area will be built parallel to the existing 900m wharf.”
Construction for this project is 65 per cent done and four months ahead of schedule.
To complement the expansion, Penang Port has taken delivery of seven Post-Panamax cranes, each costing RM25 million.
While four of the cranes were delivered in November 2009, Dr Hilmi said the remainder arrived last month.
“A Post-Panamax crane,” Dr Hilmi noted, “can reach 16 rows of containers on board the ship. The new cranes with its twin-lift capabilities will speed up handling operations as it can pick up two containers at a time.
“With these new projects, productivity at the port will be enhanced with a new target of crane productivity at more than 25 TEUs moves per hour.”
By: Btimes.com.my
Posted in PULAU PINANG
Posted on 16 February 2009. Tags: Adequate Facilities, Basheer, Berth, Chief Executive Officer, Consultations, Economic Slowdown, Expansion Plans, Hassan, Last Tuesday, Managing Director, Port Klang Authority, Ports, Recession, Rm500, Wharfs
NORTHPORT is considering to delay the upgrading of one of its wharfs due to the economic slowdown.
“I understand that Northport is considering holding back the upgrade but whether they should hold it or not is another question,” Port Klang Authority general manager Lim Thean Shiang said during a briefing in Port Klang last Tuesday.
He said certain developments were necessary to cater to continued growth even though there may not be an immediately need for it.
“During recession one can only position oneself to be ready for the up and coming growth cycle, and if we do not have the adequate facilities available, how do we capitalise on such opportunities?” Lim said.
He said Port Klang would monitor the situation and hold consultations with ports on issues involving the development of the ports.
Northport managing director and chief executive officer Datuk Basheer Hassan Abdul Kader was quoted as saying in November last year that it would keep its RM500 million expansion plans on track.
The plan includes the development of a 350m container berth, bringing the container quayline at the port to a total of 3.4km.
By : btimes.com.my
Posted in KELANG
Posted on 17 November 2008. Tags: Basheer, Cargo Logistics, Chief Executive Officer, Container Terminal, Container Throughput, Conventional Cargo, Expansion Plans, Foot Equivalent Units, KELANG, Logistics Association, Optimal Utilisation, Port Klang, Port Management, Profit Growth, Rm500, Selangor, Staff Recruitment, Strategic Initiatives, Terminal Operator, Volume Growth
Terminal operator Northport (Malaysia) Bhd has embarked on a cost-cutting exercise that will see all recruitment frozen and advertising spending slashed, in anticipation of worsening economic conditions.
“Many people are predicting that things are going to get worse next year, and so we are preparing ourselves to ride through this crisis. An obvious way is to cut costs,” said its managing director and chief executive officer Datuk Basheer Hassan Abdul Kader.
He was speaking to reporters after delivering a talk titled “Expanding the Operating Capacity of Northport through Implementing Strategic Initiatives” at the Selangor Freight Forwarders and Logistics Association in Port Klang last week.
Basheer said the port has put a freeze on staff recruitment and postponed or cut spending in areas such as advertising.
“However, we have no plans to retrench staff. In fact, it did not cross our mind,” he said, adding that the port had recruited about 30 people in the last three months.
Basheer believes that Northport’s restructuring and merger exercise between Klang Container Terminal Bhd and Kelang Port Management Bhd in 2000 will put the port in good stead to withstand the current downturn.
This includes its strategy over the past few years of focusing on revenue and profit growth instead of volume growth; the optimal utilisation of its assets such as land, labour and capital; and moving to higher-margin businesses comprising container, conventional cargo, logistics and automotive.
“Because of our prudent policy where we have kept our gearing to almost zero, we are well positioned to withstand the current crisis,” he said.
Northport is also keeping its RM500 million expansion plans on track, which include the development of a 350m container berth, bringing the container quayline at the port to a total of 3.4km.
Basheer also said the port remained on track to meet its forecast of three million TEUs (20-foot equivalent units) in container throughput this year.
However, he warned that the port has started seeing a drop in cargo volume in the fourth quarter of this year.
“Northport’s focus is import and export trade, particularly intra-Asian trade. As such, this recession is a concern to us because if Malaysian trade is affected, Northport will also be affected.
“We are starting to feel the effects of the global slowdown in the current quarter. But the drop (in cargo volume) is nothing to be seriously alarmed about yet,” said Basheer.
By : btimes.com.my
Posted in KELANG