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Wednesday

SHIPPING LINES BACK TO WORK IN CHINA


The number of new blank sailings of container shipping has started to taper off amid the impact of the coronavirus, a sign that carriers can expect demand ramping up back to normal levels over the next few weeks, according to analyst Sea-Intelligence indicating data that the weekly measurement of carriers’ blank sailings out of China show that the coronavirus impact is now subsiding.

“The bulk of the blank sailings were announced during weeks 7 (10 February) and 8. Weeks 9 and 10 have seen a clear tapering off in terms of new blank sailings, and the level of new announcements of blank sailings is back to the normal level,” said Alan Murphy, ceo of Sea-Intelligence.

Thursday

REPORTS: POLARIS STELLARBANNER 'AGROUND' OFF BRAZIL COAST




Brazilian miner Vale confirmed the incident, revealing that the crew of 20 were evacuated from the ship, which is currently located around 100km off the Brazilian coast.

According to local reports,  The ship left port of Ponta da Madeira, Brazil, on Feb 24, bound for Qingdao, reportedly she suffered water ingress in cargo hold or holds, or probably it was cargo shift. As of 1700 UTC Feb 26, the ship remains afloat, with AIS on. At least 4 tugs and SAR ships are engaged in salvage, it is said, that they’re trying to tow giant ship to shallow waters, to prevent sinking. Crew safe.

The ship’s captain maneuvered the vessel to run aground on a sand bank after it started taking on water. A spokesperson for Polaris Shipping told the news that the cause of the incident has yet to be determined.



Marine Traffic data shows the vessel was headed for Qingdao in China, and various reports say the ship had around 275,000 tons of iron ore loaded.

For Polaris Shipping, the incident comes just days after it was found guilty of failing to report defects on converted VLOC Stellar Daisy which sunk in the south Atlantic in 2017 leading to the loss of 22 lives. Kim Wan-Jung, the CEO of Polaris, was also found guilty of not reporting the vessel defects and handed a year’s probation. The shipping line was also given a KRW15m ($12,426) fine.


NAIROBI ICD - INLAND CONTAINER DEPOT NEEDS 'ADJUSTMENTS' TO REDUCE CONTAINER TURN AROUND PROCESS TIME


Kenya's Nairobi ICD, Inland Container Depot must change the policy of a turn around Container process time.

Lack of co-ordination by government agencies, Kenya Ports Authority, Kenya Revenue Authority and Kenya Bureau of Standards operating at the depot, has resulted to the current intermittent delays at the ICD that have a high cost implication on imported goods, the cost of which is passed on to consumers.

According to port weekly reports on the facility, Nairobi ICD has a capacity of 15,000 Twenty Foot Equivalent Units (TEUs) and by February 12, it had a total of total of 6,443 Teus, both 20 and 40-foot container units. In addition, 1,651 Teus that had stayed beyond 21 days were being held by the privately owned storage areas known as Peripheral Storage Facilities (PSF), leased by KPA.

KPA corporate communication officer Haji Masemo said going by the yard container population, the ICD is not supposed to experience congestion or cargo clearance delays if all players observe their Service Level Agreements. Although the yard is operating at a holding capacity of less than 50 percent most of the times in the recent past, cargo being cleared within the four–day free storage period has remained low, standing at 43 percent by February 12.

“SGR is currently able to move eight to 10 trains every day and having addressed teething problems faced when we started operations, delays are not expected,” Mr Masemo said.

According to stakeholders, most of the challenges that faced SGR operations have since been addressed and there could be a need to review the arrangement where storage facilities are being leased.

“When we started operations with more cargo being pushed through SGR, we had to create innovative measures by leasing extra storage capacity. Whether we need them in future could be reviewed,” Mr Masemo said in a phone interview.

A 2017 study by Maritime Business and Economic Consultants on CFS operations with Gichiri Ndua, former KPA managing director, as lead researcher, observed that a container yard operating at utilisation levels below 70 percent of its capacity would normally run without experiencing any congestion.

“The actual capacity of the container slots is determined to be in the range of 70-80 percent of its theoretical capacity,” the report notes.

A clearing and forwarding agent who spoke to Shipping & Logistics on condition of anonymity questioned the rationale behind transferring cargo to private facilities where they incur huge storage charges, even with the ICD having capacity to store them.

“I think there is somebody who wants to reap from our helpless situation because they know we have no choice,” said the agent who operates from Nairobi.

He said there are costs associated with ferrying containers to the yards, which can go as high as Sh15,000 per unit, stretching the last mile cost further. The facilities operate in the same model as CFSs in Mombasa where they retain the storage charges they levy.

Shippers Council of Eastern Africa (SCEA) executive officer Gilbert Langat said although there have been efforts in reducing delays at the facility, infrastructure around the ICD are still “wanting”.

“We don’t understand why roads around the ICD are still a problem because congestion is delaying turnaround time for trucks. There is also one entry and one exit which is the major cause of delay,” Mr Langat said.

There is need, he noted to harmonise the operations of the PSFs with those of the CFSs, with the view of carrying out some processes at both the facilities. The CFSs are customs areas where KRA staff are also stationed and all clearing procedures are carried out. At the same time, clearing and forwarding agents are also concerned about cargo dwell time which has gone up to an average of up to 10 days in some instances, according to William Ojonyo, former chairman of the Kenya International Freight and Warehousing Association (Kifwa).

During the week under review, the average dwell time stood at six days. This means that on average, it is impossible to clear cargo through the ICD within the free storage period. Kifwa has on several occasions raised concern that there have been systematic challenges in the pre-arrival clearance, urging KRA to carry out random verification instead of subjecting a huge number of containers to 100 percent verification. By the close of the week under review, 134 container units were awaiting verification at the ICD. The situation is made even worse when the other government interveners take part or there is a value dispute between the importer and taxman.

“Although there is need to appreciate the difficulty being experienced to clear cargo in four days, agencies that cause delays should be surcharged,” said Mr Ojonyo, who is also managing director Keynote Logistics Limited.

“The single window cargo clearing system has brought on board about 37 cargo interveners and it is easy to identify who causes these delays.”

These delays, he said, are not new, noting that before SGR started operations, importers and clearing agents used to negotiate for a 30-day free storage period with CFS operators in Mombasa to allow them time to deal with industry inefficiencies in clearance of the goods.

“At ICD and PSF, this option is not available,” he said.

When the CFSs were created in 2007, about 60 percent of cargo passing through the Port of Mombasa attracted storage charges. Since they were required to apply KPA tariff, they were supposed to generate profits from storage charges of overstayed cargo.

As they grew in number and competition became stiff, operators made arrangements with their customers, and served as distributive points and provided warehousing services to remain afloat.

Some CFSs allowed cargo to stay in their yards for up to 60 days.

Monday

SHIPPING AFFECTED AS CHINA BATTLES CORONA VIRUS



Summary:


  • Port calls by container carriers fell 30 per cent in February, from a year ago, according to Clarksons
  • Oil shipment to China from the Middle East fell to 12 per cent of what it was a year ago on February 5


Although China is trying to Cope up, Port calls to China are becoming less frequent, as fear of catching the corona virus and a slowdown in the Chinese economy have deterred cruise liners, container ships, oil tankers and bulk carriers alike from stopping at the country’s harbours.

Commercial vessels have stopped arriving, with port calls falling by an estimated 30 per cent in February, and container throughput estimated to decline by between 20 and 30 per cent, according to Clarksons – a shipping research company. Seven of the world’s 10 largest container ports are in China, including Hong Kong.

The coronavirus outbreak, which has sickened more than 75,000 around the world and killed more than 2,400, is adding to the woes of an industry that is already suffering from the US-China trade war. As many as 600 of the 3,700 passengers on the cruise ship Diamond Princess – moored in Yokohama outside Tokyo – contracted the virus while in close proximity to one another, which further deterred vessels from calling on mainland China, where more than 99 per cent of confirmed afflictions and deaths are.
As China’s labour force returns to work in phases after an extended Lunar New Year holiday imposed by the government in an effort to contain the epidemic, shipyards are slowly ramping up construction.

Still, vessel owners expect delivery to be delayed. Nine of the 19 Chinese shipyards surveyed by Clarksons put their yards on complete suspension on February 14, with none at full production.

“We foresee the delay to be between one to two months, depending on the capability and resilience of different shipyards,” said Zhou Jian-Feng, managing director of Wah Kwong Maritime Transport Holdings, which has two ships under construction at Chinese shipyards, and has several other projects underway.
Trade shows and business meetings are likely to be postponed, which means that there will be fewer building contracts signed in the short term, according to Daejin Lee, maritime analyst for IHS Markit.

Apart from the delivery delay, China’s vessel owners and shipping lines are facing difficulty finding crew, as sailors and officers from mainland China must follow quarantine regulations that apply at every port call, adding complexities and delays.
China is the second-biggest source of maritime crew, behind only the Philippines, and ahead of India, Greece and Eastern Europe, according to data by the Hong Kong Ship Owners Association (HKSOA).

The world’s second-largest economy, China accounted for 14 per cent of all containerised cargo exports last year, 23 per cent of seaborne crude oil, 35 per cent of dry bulk shipped, 18 per cent of liquefied gas and 72 per cent of all seaborne iron ore.



That has taken a drastic turn, as the corona virus outbreak gathered pace in February. Crude oil tankers have stopped sailing for China since the start of the month, compared with 3.42 billion ton-miles every day on average last year, according to satellite data provided by Vessels Value.
Shipments from the Middle East, China’s largest source of the commodity, were 280 million dead weight tonne cargo miles on February 5, a mere 12 per cent of the 2.32 billion DWT-mile shipped on the same day in 2019, according to shipping analytics firm Drewry, who note that global freight rates dropped 4.1 per cent in the second week of February, declining another 5.8 per cent this week.
That would put significant “stress” on port revenue if the low volume continues beyond March, because most European and Middle East ports have significant exposure to China, according to Fitch Ratings Agency.

Many of the world’s largest container shipping lines, including the Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), AP Moller Maersk, CMA-CGM and Hong Kong’s own OOCL have all cancelled their cargo routes from Asia to Europe and North America in recent weeks.

Sunday

VIRUS HITS SHIPPING CAUSING GLOBAL STRAIN


LONDON: Sea freight transport, the lifeblood of trade and a bellwether of the global economy, has been blown off course by the new corona virus, sparking general alarm. As analysts pore over charts to gauge just how badly Chinese mega-factories have been hit, figures provided by cargo ship traffic paint a gloomy picture.

The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) reflects the daily price of moving goods such as coal, rice and wheat along routes deemed representative of the global market. Some call it the canary in the coal mine for the economic world.

The BDI has now reached lows last seen in early 2016, when the shipping sector was suffering a supply and demand imbalance in the wake of the 2008-09 global economic crisis. Its "capesize" index for the largest category of ships -- ones that cannot even squeeze through the Suez or Panama Canals -- is at historic lows.

"The latest slump is directly related to the coronavirus epidemic in China and the subsequent restrictions on activity," London's Capital Economics consultancy said in a research note.

"Given that China accounts for about 40% of global seaborne trade, it is not so surprising that freight rates have tanked."

Lars Bastian Ostereng, an analyst with Norway's Arctic Securities, said the outbreak "basically led to full stops in many ports in China".

CORONA COSTING CONTAINER SHIPPING SO MUCH BUT RECOVERY ONGOING

Report by Sea-Intelligence claims the outbreak is costing container lines US$350m


The Corona Virus has hit Container Shipping specially from China.

The Virus is taking a heavy toll on the global shipping industry, with rates falling to record lows.

Analysts say the collapse in demand for cargo shipments to and from China will be felt for many months to come.

A survey by Beijing-based think tank the Shanghai International Shipping Institute shows that capacity utilization at the main Chinese ports had fallen by 20-50 per cent, while more than one-third of ports said storage facilities were more than 90 per cent full.

A report by Danish maritime data specialist Sea-Intelligence estimates that the outbreak is costing container shipping lines US$350m a week in lost volumes. It claims more than 350,000 containers have been removed from the international trade network since the start of the crisis last month.

APL issued a statement this week warning customers that the situation was causing container bottlenecks, with carriers warning of surcharges and cargo diversions.

“Terminal operations and pick-up of inbound containers in China has been slow,” the company said.

“Consequently, most reefer plugs at the yards of all container terminals in Shanghai and Tianjin are already occupied.

MAERSK also warned that it was being forced to divert cargo from Shanghai and Xingang as port capacity had reached critical levels and no spare reefer plugs were available.

The company advised customers with time-sensitive cargo such as fruit and vegetables to ship to other, less congested Chinese ports or find other markets.

Monday

2019 SHIPPING SUMMARY - REVIEW

The past 12 months have seen significant change in the maritime industry. Shipping has seen major progress in a number of areas including the expansion of the global mega-ship fleet, examination of the Northern Sea Route (NSR) and US-China trade all continuing to affect the fortunes of ports, carriers and stakeholders.

Among the major developments which followed on from 2018 was the growth of so-called ‘mega-ships’, vessels which can carry carry more than 20,000 TEU.

The biggest of these came in July 2019 when the Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) launched the MSC Gulsun, the largest container ship in the world with a capacity in excess of 23,000 TEU. The growth of vessels has been driven by world trade, which in itself poses new challenges. If vessels are expanding then carriers they must find new routes if they are to keep up with rapid growth of global trade.

Another major talking point in 2019 has been the growing importance of the Northern Sea Route (NSR), the Arctic passageway which could potentially greatly reduce the transit time between Asia, Europe and North America.

In June 2019 the Russian government announced plans for a deep-water port in its Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad at a cost of $US3.1 billion as the country looks to strengthen its logistics and maritime capability.

Later that month, DP World signed an agreement with the Russian Direct Investment Fund and other governmental bodies to develop the NSR, including the building of new ice-class ships, ice-breakers and other related infrastructure.

Along with the commercial potential of the NSR came concern about the environmental impact of using it as a shipping route.

Despite its potential for global trade, some of the world’s biggest carriers announced in 2019 that they will not use the NSR as a shipping route, including CMA CGM and Hapag-Lloyd.

Overshadowing almost everything in 2019 has been the International Maritime Organisation’s (IMO) upcoming regulations on sulfur emissions, which will prohibit vessels from emitting more than 0.5% throughout a voyage.


The regulations, which were decided in 2013, are supported by all the major carriers. Soren Toft, then Chief Operations Officer at A.P. Moeller-Maersk, the world’s largest carrier by market share, spoke in September 2019 about the necessity of the regulations at the UN Climate Action Summit in New York.

During his speech, Toft spoke of Maersk’s “bold” target of becoming entirely carbon neutral by 2050, a goal which involves having totally eco-friendly vessels commercial viable by 2030.

In March 2019 it launched the largest ever eco-friendly shipping project as part of a collaboration with Heineken, Phillips. Shell, Unilever, DSM and FrieslandCampina as part of a wider effort to decarbonise the maritime industry.

The core of this was a trial voyage from Rotterdam to Shanghai fueled entirely by a biofuel which it had developed with its partners.

Maersk has not been alone in their green ambitions and in fact the upcoming regulations have pushed all the world’s major carriers to pursue ways of complying.

CMA CGM announced in September 2019 that it was going to launch the world’s first mega-ship powered by liquefied natural gas (LNG). It described the CMA GCM Jacques Saade, named after its late founder, as the “largest environmentally friendly vessel in the world”.

This was the first major milestone in a project launched in November 2017 which sought to make CMA CGM the first liner to fit an entire new 20-strong vessel fleet with LNG. Furthermore, it launched its own biofuel initiative with IKEA and the Port of Rotterdam in March 2019.

There was also a major change in the executive side of shipping, with the aforementioned Soren Toft leaving his post as COO of Maersk to take on the role of CEO at MSC. This jump symbolized what some consider to be a power shift in the maritime industry, with MSC potentially set to overtake Maersk as the largest container shipping line in the world by the end of 2020 once its current orders have been fulfilled.



That will undoubtedly be one of the major talking points of 2020, as will sustainability, the trade war and the development of new transportation technologies.

Throughout 2020, more analysis for the maritime industry is expected

Source PTI

Thursday

HAPAG LLOYD DOUBLES OPERATIONAL RESULTS & SEES FAVOURABLE OUTLOOK IN CONTAINER SHIPPING

In the first nine months of 2019, Hapag-Lloyd’s earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) significantly increased to EUR 643 million (9M 2018: EUR 299 million). 

The group net result rose substantially to EUR 297 million (9M 2018: EUR 13 million). Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) surpassed EUR 1.5 billion (9M 2018: EUR 812 million). The EBITDA increase of EUR 699 million includes a positive effect of approximately EUR 341 million caused by the new reporting standards IFRS 16.


After the first nine months of the year, revenues rose to approximately EUR 9.5 billion (9M 2018: EUR 8.5 billion). The transport volume rose by 1.2 percent to 9,011 TTEU (9M 2018: 8,900 TTEU), and the average freight rate climbed by 4.2 percent to 1,075 USD/TEU (9M 2018: 1,032 USD/TEU). Transport expenses increased by 3.5 percent, in particular due to a slightly higher average bunker consumption price of USD 425 per tonne (9M 2018: USD 406 per tonne) and a stronger average US dollar exchange rate against the euro.

“We have achieved a very respectable result after nine months: Despite geopolitical tensions and trade restrictions, we benefitted from higher transport volumes and better freight rates and also kept a close eye on our costs. And the same holds true for our strategic goal of becoming number one for quality,” said Rolf Habben Jansen, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Hapag-Lloyd.

For the full financial year 2019, Hapag-Lloyd expects an EBITDA in the range of EUR 1.6 to 2.0 billion and an EBIT in the range of EUR 0.5 to 0.9 billion. Based on the business development in the first nine months of 2019, it can currently be assumed that EBITDA and EBIT will be in the upper part of the guided ranges.

This includes a currently expected earnings effect from the first-time application of the accounting standards IFRS 16 on EBITDA of EUR 370 to 470 million and on EBIT of EUR 10 to 50 million. The effects of the first-time application of IFRS 16 are also currently expected to be in the upper part of the guided ranges.


MOL OSK (SHIPPING) LINE ACQUIRES HOEGH AUTOLINER 50% EML SHARES

Höegh Autoliners and Mitsui OSK Lines (MOL) have signed an agreement whereby MOL will acquire Höegh Autoliners’ 50 percent shareholding in Euro Marine Logistics (EML).



Following the transaction MOL will become the sole owner of EML and will as part of the agreement take over the entire operations.

Thor Jørgen Guttormsen, CEO of Höegh Autoliners says, “With the agreement in place, it will allow us to fully focus on our core business of deep sea transportation. We thank Mitsui OSK Lines for our partnership since 2011. Over the years, Euro Marine Logistics has built a strong position in Europe and we are confident that Mitsui OSK Lines will continue to develop its business and capabilities providing the EU short sea market with an efficient network.”

Hirotoshi Ushioku, Executive Officer of MOL’s Car Carrier Division says “We will commit ourselves to maintain and serve the existing customers with EML quality service as sole shareholder of the company. We look forward to providing an even more integrated service to our customers, covering their deep sea and short sea needs. We thank Höegh Autoliners for their support during our eight years’ venture.”



Euro Marine Logistics NV (EML) is a European short sea roll-on/roll-off shipping and logistics company transporting more than 1 000 000 units a year. EML operates an extensive service network in the Mediterranean, Continental Europe, UK, Black Sea and Baltic.

DP WORLD AWARDED 30 YEARS CONCESSIONS AT SAUDI JEDDAH PORT

Global trade enabler DP World has been awarded a 30-year Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) concession by the Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani), for the management and development of the Jeddah South Container Terminal at the multi-purpose Jeddah Islamic Port.

Under the agreement, DP World will invest up to $500 million to improve and modernise the Jeddah Islamic Port, including major infrastructure development to enable the Port to serve the ultra-large container carriers (ULCC’s), which are considered the world’s largest mega containerships.

Established in 1976, the Jeddah Islamic Port is on the red sea and the largest port in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia with annual volumes of over 6 million TEU’s. As a crucial link on the world’s busy east-west trade route and the Kingdom’s main commercial centres, the Port currently handles approximately 60% of the country’s sea-imports and is a strategic hub that connects East-West cargo.


Developing Jeddah Islamic Port will contribute to achieving Saudi Vision 2030 as the project is considered a key milestone towards achieving the targets of The National Industrial Development and Logistics Vision Realization Program, one of the Vision’s major initiatives. The concession will also be instrumental in facilitating the smooth and efficient movement of cargo and greater access to local and international markets. DP World has operated the South Container Terminal on a lease agreement for more than 20 years.

As the main trade destination for Saudi Arabia and one of the Kingdom’s major port privatisation projects, the new terminal will also have an upgraded capacity of 3.6mn TEU up from 2.4mn TEU, to meet the expected growth demands of the future, and will provide 1,400 jobs.

Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem, DP World Group Chairman and CEO, said: “DP World is honoured to support the Kingdom’s 2030 growth vision through this new concession to transform the country into a global logistics hub. We have committed to investing significantly to modernise the Jeddah South Container terminal, which will not only result in greater direct and indirect job creation but also deliver best-in-class efficiency and productivity to the Port’s operations.”

Bin Sulayem added, “We look forward to leveraging our strategic partnership with Mawani and the Ministry of Transport and National Centre for Privatisation to collaboratively develop the Kingdom’s trade ecosystem while enhancing the nation’s competitiveness. Beyond the terminal, our ambition is to develop inland connectivity across the Arabian Peninsula between Jeddah and Jebel Ali Port in Dubai, as well as to Saudi Arabia’s cities through smart technology-led logistics, which should support further growth in this strategic hub that connects East-to-West.”


In line with DP World’s mission to transform container terminal operations through technology driven innovation, the South Container Terminal will become successfully state of the art facility with advanced infrastructure and fully commissioned smart services that ensure transparency of transactions and greater facilitation of trade.

DP World Group Chairman and CEO held a signing ceremony of the BOT concession at the Jeddah Islamic Port on 23rd December, in attendance of Makkah Acting Governor, HRH Prince Badr bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, H.E Engineer Saleh bin Naser Al Jasser, Minister of Transport and Mawani’s Chairman of the Board, H.E Bandar Alkhorayef, Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources, HE Saad Al Khalb, President of Mawani and HE Sheikh Shakbout bin Nahyan Al Nahyan, UAE Ambassador to KSA.

Wednesday

WORLD'S BIGGEST CONTAINER LINE , LOOKING AT LAMU PORT -KENYA




World’s largest container shipping company―Maersk is eying Lamu Port, a boost to the facility which is slowly getting international maritime players attention. Known as Mærsk A/S, the Danish business conglomerate with activities in the transport, logistics and energy sectors, is ready to call at the new port facility, the Star has established.

This comes as Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) moves to equip the first berth at the port which was completed on August 6, with construction of the second and third berths being underway. “Maersk has committed to bring a ship to call at Lamu Port,” Edward  Kamau-KPA General Manager  Corporate Services confirmed yesterday, “We are preparing to move equipment to support operations at the first berth which is ready.”




The equipment includes Rubber-Tyred Gantry cranes (RTGs), terminal tractors, forklifts and  reach stackers(for container handling) and pilot boats, tag boats and mooring equipment( for handling of vessels). The authority had in July called for supply of three-six tonne and two-five tonne forklifts. KPA is also installing navigation aid at the port. “These equipments are just but a few to start us off. By the time all the three berths are complete, we shall have full operations at Lamu,” Kamau said.

Maersk's operations at Lamu will be a shot in the arm to the new facility, and KPA which has offered promotional tariffs to shipping lines and port users. The largest container ship and supply vessel operator in the world since 1996, Maersk is expected to connect Lamu to over 300 ports globally, a major boost to trade in the country and the entire region. “We move at least 12 million containers every year and deliver to every corner of the globe,” an official told Reporters yesterday.

Maersk Emma, one of the biggest ships in the market has a capacity of more than 20,000 TEUs. To cement investor confidence on the port, KPA is next week planning to take shipping lines’ executives to Lamu. “We want them to appreciate how the facility looks like and what is expected of them once we commence operations,” Kamau said.

KPA has extended a 30 days storage free period for transhipment and transit cargo coming through Lamu, 14 days storage free period for domestic cargo and a 40 per cent discount for cargo-based charges as per the KPA tariff. “We are going to promote Lamu as a transshipment port. We continue talking to  to shipping lines and some vessels have shown interest to come and use Lamu for Ethiopia destined cargo,” KPA managing director Daniel Manduku told Reporters.


The government is constructing the first three berths at the planned 32-berth port which is part of the Sh2.5 trillion Lamu-South Sudan-Ethiopia Transport Corridor (Lapsset), launched in 2012 during former President Mwai Kibaki's regime. China Communication Construction Company (CCCC) has been on site since 2015 after securing a Sh49.7 billion contract, in August 2014, to construct the berths. According to transport Kenya's Transport Ministry, “berths two and three will be completed by December 2020.”

Saturday

DUBAI - AFRICA SHIPPING



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Wednesday

SHIP AGENCY IN MOGADISHU, SOMALIA

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