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Hong Kong port has little chance of regaining top spot

  Jul 4--AFTER being dethroned as the world's busiest port in 2005, Hong Kong stands little hope of ever regaining that top spot as rivals in China become bigger and better.

  Ranked as the fifth busiest for port throughput, the city trails behind Shanghai, Singapore, Shenzhen and Ningbo.

  Its throughput has been falling in the past five years, dipping to 19.8 million TEU last year, or 20 per cent less the volume in 2011 when the decline began, the South China Morning Post reported.

  Since the first container berth opened in the 1970s, the port has grown rapidly to become the world's largest by the 1990s.

  While the changing macro-economic environment and policies in recent years have worked against Hong Kong's favour, the port's declining competitiveness is also due to its own shortcomings.

  "Automation level in China's major ports is higher than Hong Kong and I believe the quick development of technology helps further automation in mainland ports," said Lothair Lam, vice president of Parakou Shipping Ltd, who has used both the Hong Kong and mainland ports.

  "However, the automation is in an initial stage... and I do expect big cost reduction with high automation in the mainland. But in Hong Kong, the cranes are generally operated manually," Lam added.

  Among its closest competitors, Hong Kong charges the highest terminal handling fees due to labour costs, according to a legislative council paper citing data from the Hong Kong Shippers' Association.

  Hong Kong charges HK$2,140 (US$274) per TEU for Transpacific eastbound shipments, much more than No 1 Shanghai's HK$974, and Singapore and Shenzhen's HK$1,003 and HK$1,188 respectively.

  From being the gateway for foreign firms to enter China, the city has now become a centre channelling Chinese investments abroad. Its changing role underscores the port's development.

  One of the biggest blows that further weighed on its decline would have been the relaxation of China's laws prohibiting foreign-flagged vessels from moving cargos from one mainland port to another, a previous restriction that Hong Kong had benefited from as China's economy rapidly grew.

  A report by the Hang Seng Management College last year illustrated a worst-case scenario for Hong Kong's port. In it, Hong Kong could lose all transshipment rights in the non-Pearl River Delta region, translating into a loss of 2.4 million TEU, which would mean a 14 per cent loss of the city's annual total container throughput.

  China's rules - commonly called cabotage in the industry - were waived for Hong Kong until the gradual relaxation that began in 2013 with Shanghai.

  "With no doubts, the port business in Hong Kong has been partially taken over by Chinese competitors especially with the country's further opening up," said Kelvin Wong, deputy managing director of Cosco Shipping Ports. "Surging exports and imports have stimulated the port industry's development in the world most populous country."

  That's a damper for a free trade port city like Hong Kong, where its port has been the bedrock of its prosperity.

  Threats to the industry go beyond the general drop in global trade and rates, as well as that Chinese ports are closer to the factories, to those that are Hong Kong-specific.

  Land and labour shortages are two factors most frequently raised by container terminal operators.

  "We have problems in attracting young people to join the industry," said Peter Levesque, managing director of Modern Terminals Group (MTL). "We need to figure out a way to solve the problem."

  The problem is not even an issue in the mainland. "Even with high automation, manpower is rich for mainland ports but not the same case in Hong Kong," said Mr Lam. "When you walk around in Hong Kong Kwai Tsing Container Terminals (KTCTs), you find most are male elders with an average age over 50 and young generation is unwilling to join the industry."

  Hong Kong operators also said the lack of land resource limited the port's development. KTCTs has nine container terminals with 24 berths and a total yard area of 279 hectares, according to government data.

  Even the government conceded in a proposal release in 2015 that "land available for port-related uses around KTCTs is limited and can hardly be increased".

  "We've been trying to educate the government about how important for us to get back-up land and additional barge berth services for many years," said Mr Levesque.

  The latest generation of container ships are bigger, up to 400 metres in length and able to carry up to 19,000 TEU. Transshipment of bigger cargoes requires more storage space and more containers arriving by barge, which is cheaper than road transport.

  All said, industry players remain upbeat that it is not difficult for Hong Kong to stay within the world's top 10 ports, thanks to the longstanding high efficiency.

  "I believe the law and regulation system, transparency, IP protection, easy-doing business?will make the city very attractive for global carriers," said Mr Levesque from MTL. "And we have seen Hong Kong government efforts [to boost the industry] and its progress such as the establishment of Hong Kong Maritime and Port Board [for ideas collection]."

  "Finance service in Hong Kong is incomparable and will support port industry, said Mr Wong from Cosco. "Some exporters and importers would like to choose Hong Kong to do business for its convenience of finance service?and definitely port industry will directly benefit from the export-and-import trading."

(Source:shippingazette)

 
 
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