“Port congestion has returned to haunt the
container markets, with Singapore becoming the latest chokepoint,” warned a
report from Asian container consultancy Linerlytica, published on Tuesday, 28
May which noted berthing delays are now up to seven days at the world’s second
largest container port with the total capacity waiting to berth rising to more
than 500,000 teu in recent days.
“The severe congestion has forced some
carriers to omit their planned Singapore port calls, which will exacerbate the problem
at downstream ports that will have to handle additional volumes,” Linerlytica
pointed out. The delays have also resulted in vessel bunching.
“The
increased demand on container handling in Singapore is a result of several
container lines discharging more containers in Singapore as they forgo
subsequent voyages to catch up on their next schedules. The number of containers handled per vessel has also increased,” the
Maritime and Port Authority (MPA) of Singapore stated in an update on what
the Southeast Asian republic was doing to counter the boxship traffic.
In
addition to the eight existing berths in Tuas Port, three new berths will
commence operations later this year. This will increase overall port handling
capacity. PSA plans to accelerate the commissioning of these new berths to help
increase overall container handling capacity in the near term. Many other
Asian ports including Shanghai, Qingdao and Port Klang are also experiencing
congestion.
Reports
from India suggest that Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), the world’s
largest container carrier, has started using Indian ports such as Kamarajar and
Visakhapatnam for its transhipment operations as congestion in Singapore and
Colombo have hampered schedule reliability.
Ports
and liners are having to contend with the effective closure of the Suez Canal
thanks to Houthi attacks from Yemen, as well as an early peak season, something
that has pushed freight rates to all-time highs – bar the covid era – this
month. “The early arrival of peak season
is adding to the cocktail of uncertainty in the market. Back at the start
of 2024 you could point to the Red Sea crisis as the root cause of spot rate
increases, this time around it is far more nuanced,” commented Peter Sand,
chief analyst at Xeneta, a freight rate platform.
“Ocean
freight carriers have tried to remedy the diversions in the Red Sea by
increasing transshipments in the western Mediterranean as well as in Asia, but
this has led to severe port congestion in several hubs,” Sand explained…“Carriers will continue to push for higher
and higher freight rates so the situation may get worse for shippers before it
gets better,” Xeneta’s Sand warned.