Besides the eight
existing berths on the north side of Tuas Port, terminal operator PSA will
expedite the opening of three new berths
later this year to increase overall port handling capacity.
Maritime and Port
Authority of Singapore (MPA) and terminal operator PSA are working closely with
liner operators and regional feeder operators to update them on their berth
availability and advise them on arrival times to minimise delays in berthing. By the 2040s, all of Singapore’s container
port operations will be consolidated in Tuas, with annual throughput estimated
at 65 million TEUs.
Alphaliner noted that
the south side of Tuas Port received its first cranes in March and some 1,000
metres of pier with eight cranes should be ready very soon.
In May, when
congestion was at its peak, the new pier did not handle any vessels yet, except
for Hapag-Lloyd’s latest 24,000 TEU ship, Singapore Express, which was
christened at the berth without loading or discharging any cargo.
This week, however,
Alphaliner registered the first calls at the South Side of Tuas 1, primarily
from smaller vessels such as the 2,732 TEU MSC Tania, handled in mid-June. From January to May, container ship calls
in Singapore have increased by 13% year-on-year. In January, close to 2,000
boxships arrived in Singapore.
The MPA has acted to
bring down the bottlenecks by reopening the shuttered Keppel Terminal, helping
to increase weekly throughput from 770,000 TEUs to 820,000 TEUs