Posted on 12 August 2010. Tags: Consolidation, Container Operations, Container Volume, Corporate Structure, Excess Capacity, Foot Equivalent Units, Gas Malaysia Sdn Bhd, Ing, Investment Bank, Johor Port, Leakages, Malakoff, Malaysia Sdn Bhd, Minimal Impact, Parent Company, Port Of Tanjung Pelepas Ptp, Shippers, Singapore Ports, Tampoi, Tebrau
The expected cost savings from the consolidation of Johor Port and Port of Tanjung Pelepas’ (PTP) operations can still be achieved without changing their corporate structure, says Kenanga Investment Bank research head Yeonzon Yeow.
“The deferment of the rationalisation plan of the two ports will have minimal impact on their parent company, MMC Corp Bhd. Whether they consolidate or not, both ports are still within the group,” he told StarBiz yesterday. MMC owns 100% of Johor Port and 70% of PTP.
MMC proposed to streamline operations at the two ports to reduce cargo leakages to Singapore, which has been going on for many years due to better connectivity offered by Singapore ports.
The consolidation would also see Johor Port’s container operations in Pasir Gudang moved to PTP in Gelang Patah, turning the former into a non-containerised port.
But the Government shot down the idea last week due to the distance between the two ports, which is about 90km, as shippers and manufacturers operating in Pasir Gudang, Tampoi and Tebrau complained that they would incur higher transportation cost going to PTP.
OSK Research Sdn Bhd research head Chris Eng said with the deferment, the listing of MMC’s port units was unlikely to materialise soon.
“Nonetheless, we believe there is still the possibility of MMC list ing its other units, Gas Malaysia Sdn Bhd and Malakoff Corp Bhd within the next two to three years,” he said in a recent note to clients.
Eng said the deferment of the consolidation exercise would also result in PTP’s excess capacity being underutilised for the time being.
He said the main reason for the rationalisation between the two biggest ports in Johor was because the container operations at Johor Port was congested with minimal room for further expansion.
“The consolidation would boost container volume at PTP, helping it reach the eight million twenty-foot equivalent units level, which would then help to attract new customers,” he said.
Posted in JOHOR
Posted on 01 August 2010. Tags: Asia Coverage, Asia Market, Asia Trade, Customer Demand, Gap, Japanese Ports, Malaysia Port Klang, Nagoya, Oocl, Orient Overseas Container Line, Osaka, Overseas Container Line, Personalised Services, Shekou, Shippers, Shipping Lines, Skilled Workforce, Vote Of Confidence, Westports Malaysia, Yokohama
Westports Malaysia, Port Klang’s leading terminal, and Orient Overseas Container Line (OOCL) have jointly launched the KTX3 Service, which provides fast connectivity to Japan for Malaysian shippers.
The KTX3 service on the Intra-Asia trade now connects Westports with direct weekly services to the Japanese ports of Osaka, Tokyo, Nagoya, Yokohama and Kobe.
Also in the loop is Keelung in Taiwan, Shekou and Hong Kong.
“With direct connectivity to Japan, we are now providing more options for our customers to send or receive cargoes to and from Japan.
“Westports is not only a long haul port. We have now closed the gap on Intra-Asia coverage as we have increased our presence in the Intra-Asia routes,” said Westports Executive Director Ruben Emir Gnanalingamin in a statement on Sunday.
Thanking OOCL and Westports customers for their vote of confidence and continued support, he said Westports remained committed to delivering high productivity and service standards demanded by shipping lines and customers.
OOCL’s Regional Managing Director Captain S.C.Chan said the service was enhanced recently to meet increasing customer demand in the region.
Since its introduction, Chan said the KTX service had proven to be highly dependable and popular among customers in the Intra-Asia market.
“We are excited of this extension of the KTX3 service to Westports as we believe the port has proven to be a highly productive port in the world, trusted with skilled workforce, reliability, security as well as a friendly port with personalised services,” he added.
— BERNAMA
Posted in KELANG
Posted on 22 June 2009. Tags: Ahmad, Business Times, Cargo Containers, Chief Executive Officer, Container Shipping Lines, Foot Container, International Container Shipping, International Ship, International Shipping Lines, Keng, Overweight Containers, Penang, Ppsb, Sdn Bhd, Ship Owners Association, Shippers, Terminal Operator, Tonn, Transportation Operators, Transshipment
Penang Port Sdn Bhd (PPSB) is throwing the ball back into the court of international shipping lines who have slammed the terminal operator for not penalising shippers that overload their cargo containers on a vessel.
PPSB chief executive officer Datuk Ahmad Ibnihajar said it was based on the appeals made by shipping lines to allow overloaded vessels into the port that resulted in no enforcement made to date.
“It’s the members of the International Ship Owners’ Association of Malaysia (ISOA) themselves who have been appealing to us and now they are blaming us for not penalising the offending shippers,” he told Business Times.
Ahmad was responding to a Business Times report where international container shipping lines operating at Penang Port slammed the terminal operator for not penalising shippers who overload their cargo containers on a vessel, saying it could lead to an accident.
ISOA secretary Fong Keng Lun said requests for enforcement have been sent to PPSB as early as June last year, but so far the calls have gone unheeded.
Ahmad said PPSB will be calling a meeting of all its users soon and ask them to decide whether they want enforcement to take effect immediately.
“The ISOA members can decide if they want us to ignore their previous appeal and support the rule that any overweight containers detected by us be not allowed to be loaded onto the vessels,” he added.
Fong had claimed that ISOA had sent repeated requests to PPSB to impose the rule that any overweight containers detected by the terminal operator will not be allowed to be loaded onto the vessels.
He said apart from the risks to human lives and the transportation operators’ equipment, some of the overweight containers were subsequently detected at transshipment ports like Hong Kong and were held back until the shipping lines had repacked the overweight containers.
The maximum permissible weight of a 20-foot container is 24 tonnes, 30.48 tonnes for a 40-foot container and up to 32 tonnes for a new-generation 40-foot container.
By : Marina Emmanuel
Posted in PULAU PINANG