What's happening in Mediterranean & Africa

 

Mediterranean & Africa
Trade Specialists
 

 

Headway Speed Transportation
Co., Ltd.

Make perfect logistic service! H.S.T
create with you!
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Highroad International Logistics

Professional door to door service
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Panda Logistics Co., Ltd.
Qingdao Branch

Qingdao's leading consolidator and
comprehensive logistics service
provider
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.

Choice Int'l Forwarding Co Ltd. 

Your Best Choice to Africa
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Awards Shipping Agency Ltd.

From humble beginnings to full
global air and seafreight logistics
service provider.
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 With a strong dollar, US consumers have money to spend on imports
    from Africa
  
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 State of African ports around the continent port by port assessed   
   
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 Euro-Mediterranean partnership encompassing North Africa still a work
   in progress    
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 If Cape route makes sense on the back-haul, it might make sense on
   head-haul too  
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Barcelona: Challenging all for the Mediterranean's logistics
crown

 


BARCELONA, an important cultural centre and a major tourist destination, has fast evolved into a key logistics player in the Mediterranean and southern Europe, says the Hong Kong Trade Development Centre (HKTDC).

Hong Kong's Hutchison Whampoa through its subsidiary, Hutchison Port Holdings (HPH), have long deployed extensive port investment across the region. So has Hong Kong's Kerry Logistics Network strengthened its operations there?

This is due, says an article on the HKTDC website, to its strategic geographic location, from which logistics players have long achieved benefit from the city's success in vying for the region's logistics crown.

"While it is true that the northern European ports, such as Rotterdam, Antwerp, Hamburg, Amsterdam and Bremerhaven account for the lion's share of Europe-Asia cargo flow, handling more than 75 per cent of the traffic or more than 19 million TEU annually, southern Mediterranean ports, such as Barcelona, are steadily coming to play a more significant role in international maritime logistics," said the article.

This is largely due to their access to the Mediterranean through the Suez Channel and their improving intermodal transport infrastructure.

It is estimated that one-quarter of the cargo flows between Europe and Asia pass through the Suez Canal and various southern European ports, notably Marseille (France), Genoa (Italy), Valencia (Spain), Algeciras (Spain), Barcelona (Spain) and Sines (Portugal).

This trend is set to boost the growth of long haul shipping routes from Asia to the east coast of the US via the Suez Canal, as well as the popularity of short sea shipping among the Mediterranean ports.

That said, since 2008, the Port of Barcelona has seen a gradual rebalancing in the ratio of its imports and exports, with a continued increase in the importance of outgoing cargo movement. This trend is basically in line with the country's shrinking imports during the European crisis and the ensuing export-led economic restructuring.

The reduction in the share of incoming cargo in the Port's overall goods traffic, from 61 per cent in 2008 to 51 per cent in 2013, serves as a clear indicator of how the port and the country are transforming from an importer into an exporter.

The Port of Barcelona, through its connections with some 850 ports and 450 regular consolidated sea lines worldwide, handles more than one-fifth of Spain's maritime trade.

Cargo throughput in the Port of Barcelona was more than 41 million tonnes and 1.7 million TEU. The port is also one of Spain's most important assets in terms of national and regional tourism development, receiving 2.6 million pleasure cruise passengers a year.

As a real alternative to the northern European ports, according to Intermed's estimates, Mediterranean ports can help reduce the increase in CO2 emissions from Europe-Asia traffic over the next decade by cutting the travelling distance.

For instance, by channelling via the Port of Barcelona, a container shipped from Asia destined for Lyon in France can cut off up to 1,900-miles travelling distance compared to transiting via the Port of Antwerp in Belgium.

This is among the reasons Hong Kong logistics players are giving Barcelona new resonance in the Asia-Europe trade.

Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa (through its subsidiary, Hutchison Port Holdings or HPH), have long appreciated the significance of the Mediterranean ports in terms of global logistics and have, therefore, deployed extensive port investment across the region.

At the same time, a number of Asian logistics service providers, such as Hong Kong's Kerry Logistics Network (a major logistics player in Spain since 2005), have strengthened their business presences in various strategic port cities.

With the opening of the group's first semi-automated deepwater container terminal- Barcelona Europe South Terminal (BEST) in September 2012, for example, HPH (under its Spanish subsidiary, Terminal Catalunya [TERCAT]) is looking to profit from the traffic rebalancing between northern and southern European ports.

This move is complementary to the Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T) initiative adopted in November 2013 by the European Commission in order to strengthen the pan-European transport infrastructure and reduce logistics and environmental costs in Europe.

To accommodate the trend toward bigger container vessels, many of the Mediterranean ports, including the Port of Barcelona, have carried out related expansion work. When BEST's expansion is completed, it will be the only port in the region capable of handling the four biggest vessels simultaneously with 27 automated blocks, 11 gantry cranes and a 1,500 metre-long dock with a depth of at least 16 metres along the whole berth line.

BEST, with its eight-track railway facility, also has the biggest on-dock rail terminal in the Mediterranean. High-speed rail connections with Toulouse, Lyon and Paris have been running since December 2013.

Following in the footsteps of BEST and the Kerry Logistics Network, Hong Kong logistics players can consider adding Barcelona to their service packages, while expanding their operations in the Mediterranean and southern Europe. They can then look to capitalise on city's port and rail facilities in order to benefit from the growing Europe-Asia trade flows.
 

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Given the arguments above, do you think the southern route through southern European ports like Barcelona will ever
rival access through ports of the Northern Range through
which most cargo flow from Asia?
 

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