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No luck for PSA in Indian Subcontinent as terminal operator looks to homeward expansion

 


SINGAPORE'S PSA International, one of the leading global terminal operators, is finding it tough-going in the Indian Subcontinent it would seem.

First there was the unexpected exit from Pakistan's Gwadar Port project and more recently in India the Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT) cancelled a contract with PSA to develop a container terminal¡Xthe value of which was estimated to have been worth US$1.5 billion.

The two events, some would say, have dealt a decisive blow to PSA's ongoing drive to expand its presence in South Asia¡K

Of course the terminal operator is not without a presence in the region, with facilities in Kandla and Chennai. But in terms of volumes, neither of these come close to the throughput numbers and potential numbers that JNPT offers¡Xafter all, this is still the leading gateway into India.

Industry watchers have long wondered why PSA never made an aggressive bid for the Sri Lankan port of Hambantota, whatever the political posturings behind the then competing bids of the Indian and Chinese governments.

As usual PSA officials will neither comment nor speculate on the outcome of all these developments beyond the customarily mandated politesse of "no comment".

Yet given what PSA is and what PSA will always be, the Singaporean icon is undeterred.

In news releases to HKSG Group Media it said that it will be investing some $2.8billion in infrastructure and port technology to develop Phases 3 and 4 of its Pasir Panjang Terminal.

The upgrades and redevelopment are all part of a plan to accommodate the VLCS (Very Large Containerships) and ULCS (Ultra Large Containerships) of the future, now increasingly traversing the world's oceans.  

PSA's CEO Tan Chong Meng told the media recently, "While mega-vessels are already a common sight at our terminals today, they are growing even larger for greater economies of scale".

PSA's avowed aim is to always snag top-flight status with top-flight equipment.

Plans are actually underway to install automated container yards with proprietary intelligent planning and operation systems, unmanned and rail-mounted gantry cranes to be run on electricity.

Additionally there is to be a quest for "novel" port designs.

The grandiose schemes are all part of a national overarching plan geared towards consigning all port activities to the seemingly barren and sleepy outpost of Tuas in south-western Singapore.

Lying at the farther most, outer circumference of Singapore, Tuas does indeed make an ideal spot especially when it grants a spectator's view of ships and tankers headed to North Asia as they make their way past the effluent waters in the Malacca Straits.

Tuas is not overshadowed by traffic gridlock seen in the thereabouts of the current Tanjung Pagar terminal or the "container jungle" features dotting the former naval outpost in Brani Terminal.

It is tucked safely away and rarely visited by Singaporeans owing to nothing more than its distance from the city-centre.  

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Do you foresee the Port of Tanjung Pelepas in Malaysia eating into PSA's transhipment business in Singapore over the course of the next decade and why?  

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