Freight fight: Caribbean cargo hubs expand rapidly, but there aren't enough boxes to go around. (Trade Lanes).About five years ago, Hutchinson Port Holdings began developing Freeport, Bahamas Freeport is a city and free trade zone on the island of Grand Bahama, located approximately 100 mi (160 km) east-northeast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida and gives its name to a district of the Bahamas. Freeport proper has 26,910 people. , for cargo. With virtually no domestic freight, the Hong Kong-based company bet millions of dollars that the traditional cruise port could become a major hub for cargo distribution. "We were aware that Freeport was a risky venture," says Michael Sandpearl, general manager of Freeport Container Port. Freeport now ranks in the top five of the Latin American container port leagues. But an explosion of competing cargo hubs in the Caribbean could sink the transshipment Transshipment The passing goods from one ocean vessel to another. business. At least six major facilities centers now compete for freight that will sustain, at best, three operations. "There are too many players," says Sandpearl. Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (pwār`tō rē`kō), island (2005 est. pop. 3,917,000), 3,508 sq mi (9,086 sq km), West Indies, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) SE of Miami, Fla. has announced ambitious plans to build a US$1 billion mega-port complex extending from Ponce to Guayanilla. Venezuela's Puerto Cabello Puerto Cabello (pwār`tō käbā`yō), city (1990 pop. 128,825), N Venezuela, a port on the Caribbean Sea. An important Venezuelan port, it ships meat, coffee, cacao, dyewoods, and copper ores. will seek once again to interest investors in a $320 million project to double the port's size in the next three years. CSX CSX Chessie Seaboard Multiplier (railroad transportation company) CSX Cayman Islands Stock Exchange CSX Changsha, China (Airport Code) CSX Cardiac-Specific Homeobox CSX Seaboard Coastline Railroad World Terminals and its Dominican partners are investing $200 million to build a new port in Caucedo, near Santo Domingo Santo Domingo, pueblo, United States Santo Domingo (sän'tə dəmĭng`gō), pueblo (1990 pop. 2,866), Sandoval co., N central N.Mex., on the Rio Grande; founded c.1700 after earlier pueblos were destroyed by floods. , by the second quarter of 2003. In Jamaica, Kingston port authorities port authorities npl → autoridades fpl portuarias have already plowed more than $100 million into their operations to raise capacity by almost a third. If all of these and other planned projects are completed, the Caribbean Basin The Caribbean Basin is generally defined as the area running from Florida westward along the Gulf coast, then south along the Mexican coast through Central America and then eastward across the northern coast of South America. will have a half dozen ports with combined capacity exceeding 6 million 20-foot equivalent units (TEUs) per year, compared to Latin America's estimated total container traffic of 9 million TEUs in 2001. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. research company DRI-WEFA, the region's container traffic will grow 7% to almost 9.7 million TEUs in 2002. That's not enough to put cargo on the docks of all the ports. To date, independent terminal operators are winning the battle for boxes. Manzanillo International Terminal has helped transform Colon, Panama, into Latin America's leading container port. Operating company operating company A business that engages in transactions with outsiders. Stevedoring Services of America and its Panamanian partners plan to pump an additional $30 million into the highly successful terminal. Manzanillo Marketing Vice President Carlos Urriola says the company is not losing sight of market conditions. "It's easy to spend the money to build facilities, but the ability to get prices [for services] to make economic sense is the challenge," he adds. Cutthroat shipping. Curtis Foltz, general manager of the Americas region for CSX, is also concerned a capacity glut could bring rates down. Although CSX remains committed to its $200 million port project in the Dominican Republic Dominican Republic (dəmĭn`ĭkən), republic (2005 est. pop. 8,950,000), 18,700 sq mi (48,442 sq km), West Indies, on the eastern two thirds of the island of Hispaniola. The capital and largest city is Santo Domingo. , "we want to stay away from an environment of rate competition," Foltz says. Excess cargo handling options mean shipping lines will be able to play ports against each for the best prices. "There is tremendous pressure from shipping lines to reduce rates," says Freeport's Sandpearl. "Shipping lines threaten to move from one place to another to get reduced rates." To survive, terminal operators will need more than cargo for redistribution to other destinations, many analysts say Transshipment centers will have to offer well-located, low-cost operations as well as large domestic freight flows and a shipping-line partner, says Hans Peter, president of Baltic Maritime Advisers and former principal transport adviser for the World Bank. "Transshipment is the icing on the cake." Many independent terminal operators disagree. Foltz, of CSX World Terminals -- which used to be the terminal operations The reception, processing, and staging of passengers; thereceipt, transit, storage, and marshalling of cargo; the loadingand unloading of modes of transport conveyances; and themanifesting and forwarding of cargo and passengers todestination. See also operation; terminal. arm of shipping line Maersk -- says that while a shipping line partner helps reduce the initial risk of investment, it also lowers the return on the investment. Hutchinson's success at Freeport seems to fly in the face of to defy; to brave; to withstand. to insult; to assail; to set at defiance; to oppose with violence; to act in direct opposition to; to resist. See also: Face Fly the requirement that a terminal cannot survive solely as a cargo hub. Port exec Sandpearl makes no bones about what the Bahamian terminal is trying to do. "We are looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. opportunities to take market share from other ports," he says. That goal may get more complicated as increasing numbers of ports join the fray. As far south as Suape in Brazil's Pernambuco Pernambuco (pərnəmb `k ), state (1991 pop. 7,127,855), 37,946 sq mi (98,280 sq km), NE Brazil, on the Atlantic Ocean. state
and as far north as Norfolk, Virginia Norfolk is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia, in the United States of America. With a population of 234,403 as of the 2000 census, Norfolk is Virginia's second-largest incorporated city. , in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , ports are
seeking to become cargo hubs. "What is the range of
transshipment?" asks Freeport's Sandpearl "A hunch of
second-tier ports would like to get involved."Making matters still more complicated is Puerto Rico's proposed entry into the market. While financing for the Port of the Americas project remains sketchy, the port of San Juan San Juan, city, Argentina San Juan (săn wän, Span. sän hwän), city (1991 pop. 353,476), capital of San Juan prov., W Argentina. It is a commercial and industrial center in an agricultural region. already boasts 2 million TEUs of container traffic a year. "We are envisioning the Port of the Americas as much more than a transshipment enter," says Hector Jimenez Juarbe, general manager of the project. He says, in addition to cargo handling, it will offer manufacturing facilities' warehousing, distribution and logistics centers. Not everybody is convinced that the Puerto Rican project will get off the ground, but many believe competition among ports will shape them into more than just places to pick up and drop off cargo. "Visionary ports will focus on being logistics centers," says Giovanni Benedetti, a senior manager at Colombia's Sociedad Portuaria Regional de Cartagena. That seems to imply that the stakes for terminal operators are poised to rise again, something they apparently I have grown used to. "I would be the last one to argue that we are not in a risky business," says Freeport's Sandpearl.
CARGO OUTLOOK
Twenty-foot equivalents units
1999 2000 2001 (e) 2002 (f)
Brazil 2,053,595 2,210,830 2,221,306 2,382,775
Caribbean 1,100,197 1,163,722 1,157,187 1,223,210
Mexico 938,821 1,054,975 1,092,273 1,193,958
Central America 973,422 1,042,300 1,063,351 1,143,946
Argentina 823,943 862,807 860,304 917,995
Chile 774,434 838,028 845,583 905,227
Venezuela 577,504 599,933 597,564 627,624
Colombia 468,931 500,645 505,619 543,958
Peru 233,072 246,402 248,459 263,791
Rest of South America 405,356 425,387 427,093 453,730
Total 8,349,275 8,945,029 9,018,739 9,656,214
SOURCE: DRI-WEFA
e=estimate
f=forecast
MAJOR PORT DEVELOPMENTS
Location Financing
Ponce and Guayanilla Puerto Rico Pending
Puerto Cabello Venezuela Pending
Caucedo Dominican CSX World Terminals, Caucedo
Republic Development Corp.
Kingston Jamaica Ports Authority
Colon Container Terminal Panama Evergreen
Manzanillo Int. Terminal Panama Stevedoring Services of
America and local investors
Location US$ millions Status
Ponce and Guayanilla 1,000 Proposals to be accepted in
first half of 2002
Puerto Cabello 320 Proposals to double capacity
in three years by
February 2002
Caucedo 200 New port to be completed by
June 2003
Kingston 102 Done, Increased capacity 30% to
1.2 million TEJs
Colon Container Terminal 80 Increase capacity to 1 million
TEUs by end of 2002
Manzanillo Int. Terminal 30 Build new 400 meter-long berth
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