Posted on 08 July 2010. Tags: Commercial Zone, Committee Meeting, Consultative Committee, Datuk Seri, Economic Planning Unit, Hilmi, Indonesia Malaysia, Industrial Zone, Land Reclamation, Line Operators, Ninth Malaysia Plan, Penang, Petroleum Tank, Port Users, Ppsb, Rm500, Sdn Bhd, Tank Farm, Yahaya
Middle Eastern investors may invest some RM1.5 billion in a petroleum tank farm and halal industrial park in Penang Port.
Penang Port Sdn Bhd (PPSB) chairman Datuk Seri Dr Hilmi Yahaya yesterday said potential investors have approached PPSB to set up shop in the port area to tap the export potential of the Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle.
“We are looking at reclaiming some 400 hectares of land to accommodate the proposed tank farm and halal hub.
“We also have plans to house a free commercial zone and free industrial zone within the port area to facilitate the easier movement of goods for investors,” Dr Hilmi told reporters after a Penang Port Commission port consultative committee meeting chaired by PPC chairman Tan Cheng Liang.
The closed-door meeting, which was attended by officials from the finance and transport ministries and the Economic Planning Unit, was also attended by Penang port users.
The proposed area for land reclamation would be south of the Butterworth Port on mainland Penang.
“Since we have received positive indication of the port’s RM350 million request from the federal government to carry out capital dredging works under the 10th Malaysia Plan, we are hoping that the sand from the dredging activities can be used for our land reclamation purposes,” he said.
The north channel dredging of the port, from its current 11.5m depth to 14.5m, was supposed to be carried out between 2010 and 2012 to serve main line operators calling at the port.
However, the government deferred the project in its mid-term review of the Ninth Malaysia Plan.
Dr Hilmi noted the tank farm is likely to bring in a RM1 billion investment, while the proposed halal hub will rake in an estimated RM500 million.
“We are looking at potential investors to help us finance this project,” he added, “since we do not want to borrow any funds.
“We have had interest shown by parties from China and the Middle East so far to help us in the funding,” he added.
Several investors – such as those engaged in liquid crystal display production – have stated that they want to be located in an area where shipping of the goods can be seamless.
“Our next step would be to call in all interested parties to map out a detailed plan, before we proceed with obtaining permission from the federal authorities via the finance and transport ministries.”
Dr Hilmi, a former finance ministry parliamentary secretary, gave an assurance that the proposed Penang Port expansion plan would in no way end up like the scandal-hit Port Klang Free Zone project in Selangor.
By: Marina Emmanuel
Posted in PULAU PINANG
Posted on 25 November 2009. Tags: Chief Minister, Container Terminal, Container Vessels, Environmental Requirements, Guan, Lim Guan Eng, Merchant Ships, Ninth Malaysia Plan, Penang, Port Management, Port Operator, Port Users, Sdn Bhd, Shipping Companies, Shipping Lines, Shipping Services, Smooth Sailing, State Economy, Yardstick
PENANG: Penang Port Sdn Bhd (PPSB), the port operator, has invested RM1.1 billion over the last five years to upgrade infrastructures at the port and Container Terminal as part of initiatives to pump-prime the state economy, Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng said on Wednesday.
He said the huge investment had indirectly bolstered operations of the port and the terminal, key revenue contributors to the state economy.
Continuous upgrading of infrastructures at the Penang Port and Container Terminal is to provide shipping companies and other port users user-friendly facilities, a crucial element to woo more shipping lines and container vessels to the port and the terminal, he told reporters after a briefing by the port management on Wednesday.
To realise Penang Port’s mission to provide world-class shipping services, Guan Eng said the port’s latest and efficient logistics would be the yardstick to increase the number of merchant ships and containers anchoring at the port.
The Chief Minister also called on the Federal Government to re-start the RM353 million project to deepen the North Channel at Penang Port to facilitate smooth sailing-in of container vessels.
“If the deepening work is not done in compliance with environmental requirements, it will harm plans to turn Penang into a green state,” he said.
He also hoped projects promised for Penang under the current Ninth Malaysia Plan but have not been implemented due to various reasons would be carried forward to the 10th Malaysia Plan. – Bernama
Posted in PULAU PINANG
Posted on 08 June 2009. Tags: Anniversary Celebration, Blueprint, Coffers, Competitiveness, Datuk Seri, Environmental Impact Assessment, Feeder, Financing Options, Indonesia Malaysia, Last November, Ninth Malaysia Plan, Northern Corridor Economic Region, Ong Tee Keat, Penang Mca, Port Expansion, Private Finance Initiative, Sdn Bhd, Transport Minister
Besides the private finance initiative model, the government may opt to use its own coffers for the project
THE government is exploring the possibility of using a private finance initiative (PFI) model to deepen the north channel of Penang Port.
Transport Minister Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat said besides the PFI model, another alternative is for the government to use its own coffers for the project, which is estimated to cost RM1 billion.
He said a study is being carried out to determine the feasibility and suitability of both models.
“We will decide on the matter based on the outcome of the study. This is top on my priority list and I hope the engineering working proper will kick off before September this year,” he told reporters in Penang yesterday after launching the Penang MCA’s 60th party anniversary celebration.
The government had announced last November that it would resume work on the project, which had been shelved under the Ninth Malaysia Plan (9MP) mid-term review.
Ong had said then that after studying the benefits in dredging Penang Port’s channel, his ministry felt that the project should proceed in order to enhance the port’s competitiveness.
“The Penang Port is currently a feeder port. We should not forget its glorious past and the importance of the port to the country, the state and its people,” he said, adding that what worried him was the depth of the current port, which is between 9m and 11m.
“We hope to deepen the depth to between 15m and 17m to enhance the port’s competitiveness,” he said, adding that an environmental impact assessment (EIA) report will also be carried out before the project proper.
Operator Penang Port Sdn Bhd is targeting to develop Penang Port into a premier port by 2012 if the deepening of the north channel proceeds.
The Penang Port expansion and upgrading are outlined in the Northern Corridor Economic Region (NCER) blueprint to promote it as the leading port in the Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle.
Meanwhile, Ong who was also asked on a proposal by Bukit Bendera MP Liew Chin Tong for the Penang state government to take over the ferry operations which were reported to have suffered RM20 million losses last year.
“Anyone can propose anything but it should not be just a mere statement. Show us the proposal and we will see whether its viable or not,” Ong said, adding that he had received numerous inputs on the matter by various parties including the state MCA and individuals.
He added that so long as the proposal was genuine and for the benefit of the people, he was willing to consider it.
By : Audrey Dermawan
Posted in PULAU PINANG
Posted on 20 October 2008. Tags: Advance Notification, Bylaws, Chief Executive Officer, Containers, Free Storage, Freight Forwarders, Hiccups, Import Shipments, Logistics Association, Logistics Provider, Ministry Of International Trade And Industry, Ninth Malaysia Plan, Notification Requirement, Pka, Port Klang Authority, Standard Operating Procedure, Standard Operating Procedure Sop, Storage Containers, Storage Period, Trade Associations, Ween
Come January, a new law reducing the period in which containers can be stored at Port Klang for free from five days to three will be enforced
PORT Klang Authority (PKA) will organise a trial run for the soon-to-be-implemented three-day free storage period for containers at Port Klang from November 1, with the cooperation of several members of the Selangor Freight Forwarders & Logistics Association.
“We are having the trial run to ensure that there are no hiccups in January when we fully implement the ruling … it also gives us two months to refine it to make sure that it benefits the whole port community once it is implemented,” PKA general manager and chief executive officer Lim Thean Shiang said in Port Klang last week.
Come January, a new law reducing the period in which containers can be stored at Port Klang for free from five days to three will be enforced.
In July this year, PKA had set up a committee, which comprises representation from all trade associations, to come up with a standard operating procedure (SOP), detailing the role each party plays in the total logistics chain and the cut-off time for export and import shipments.
Lim said almost 100 per cent of the SOP of each logistics provider has been finalised to date.
The committee has also come up with three areas of improvement that need to be focused on.
Firstly, the need for an amendment to clause 65(3) of the Port Klang Authority Bylaws to exempt containers which are detained by Other Governments Agencies, and a change in calculation of free storage period from days to hours.
The committee also suggested that the advance notification requirement to hauliers be reduced from 48 hours to 24.
PKA will consult with the Ministry of International Trade and Industry Development on the matter of the advance notification as the Association of Malaysian Hauliers has yet to agree to it.
Lim also said as part of the Ninth Malaysia Plan, PKA is looking at improving the connectivity bet-ween Northport and Westports due to the high cost of inter-terminal transfer of containers between the two ports.
The regulator is mulling the possibility of having a dedicated road for transporters between the ports, so as to reduce the number of accidents on public roads as well as to cut the handling costs between the two ports.
By: btimes.com.my
Posted in KELANG