China’s Cosco Shipping
has been building the Chancay port near Lima expecting to be its exclusive
operator when it opens in November. But government lawyers sued to challenge that status earlier this year, saying the facility should be available to
other companies offering services such as loading and unloading shipping containers.
The surprise lawsuit was criticized by the
company, Chinese
lenders and Peruvian industry groups that argued
virtually all other ports in the South American country have exclusive
operators. President Dina
Boluarte’s government now says the issue has been resolved and the lawsuit will
be dropped.
“Their exclusivity is
now a fact and the issue of the lawsuit is history,” Juan Carlos Paz, head of
Peru’s port authority, said in an interview. Government lawyers formally asked a judge to dismiss the civil lawsuit
on Monday,24 June, he added.
A Chancay
representative concurred, saying the issue had been resolved in a way that was
favorable to the port and to the broader shipping industry.
Boluarte, who is visiting China, has meetings
scheduled with Cosco officials on Thursday and with President Xi Jinping on
Friday.
The Chancay port is
expected to transform trade between South America and Asia by slashing travel
times for cargo ships. The facility, which has become a lightning rod for
US-China tensions in the region, is due to be inaugurated when Peru hosts the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders’ summit later this year.