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31 Jan 2010
PHNOM Penh Autonomous Port will maintain a recovery into 2010 with projected 26 percent revenue growth, the facility's director general, Hei Bevy said, as it continues to benefit from connections to Cai Mep deepwater port in Southern Vietnam.
It has signed up with international shipping line MAERSK in connecting
to the new Vietnamese port, said Hei Bevy, and is now targeting $6.25
million in revenues for 2010, which would easily beat the 2007 record,
$5.26 million.
The port suffered a 2 percent fall in revenues last year to US$4.93
million following an 8.8 percent drop in volumes, according to figures
obtained by the Post on Wednesday.
That beat a January 3 projection by the Phnom Penh Autonomous Port’s
Director General Eang Veng Sun who estimated that revenues had dropped
15 percent last year, without giving a revenue forecast.
Sihanoukville Autonomous Port suffered a 16 percent fall in revenues in
2009 to $24.19 million, according to official figures, which still made
it by far the biggest port facility in the Kingdom.
The newly issued figure for Phnom Penh also beat the downturn in
Cambodian trade as the capital’s port benefited from the July opening
of the Cai Mep facility, which allows more convenient connections down
the Mekong and cuts days off passage to North America by avoiding
other, less convenient Asian hubs, particularly Singapore and Hong Kong.
MAERSK “will link their delivery from Hong Kong with the Phnom Penh Autonomous Port through Vietnam’s Cai Mep”, said Hei Bevy.
The fallout from the economic crisis which pushed Cambodian exports
down 18.2 percent and imports down 17 percent therefore barely
registered at the Phnom Penh port, even if it did post a second
consecutive annualised drop in revenues.
In the first half of 2010 before Cai Mep opened, the capital’s port saw
revenues slump 20 percent, its figures showed, a situation that
immediately reversed with the opening of Cai Mep as Phnom Penh’s
traffic grew 0.84 percent in July, 22.65 percent in August, 22.7
percent in September and 8.61 percent in October.
According to Hei Bevy, MAERSK will transfer 10 percent of its traffic from Sihanoukville to Phnom Penh.
“Many companies seem to be interested in using the port to ship their
freight,” said Hin Theany, line division general manager at Mitsui OSK
Lines (MOL), the first company to ship textile products through the
Phnom Penh Autonomous Port. It “will get bigger revenue this year”.
According to projections, the port is expected to ship 585,600 tonnes
of goods this year, 1.35 million tonnes of fuel and gas in 62,500
standard containers compared with 43,312 containers last year.
Last week Hei Bevy told the Post that Chinese company Shanghai would
develop a $30 million upgrade on the port after it was granted
permission by the government.
Source: The phnom Penh Post