Construction of the new facility comes as Singapore looks set to handle
a record-breaking container volume of 40 million 20-foot equivalent units
(TEUs) in 2024. Spanning more than
185,000 sq m and located within the limits of Singapore’s new mega port, the
new PSA supply chain hub is expected to be completed in the second quarter of
2027.
Speaking at an event to officially mark the start of construction work, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong
said the hub will improve the Republic’s ability to handle cargo
shipments.
PM Wong, who is
also Finance Minister, said the new hub will have facilities to handle dangerous
goods, as well as goods that require cold storage. This will allow it to process higher-value cargo, such as
pharmaceuticals and chemicals that require special handling.
“Currently, businesses that want such services have to truck their cargo
out of the port, incurring duties, and then truck it back to the port for
shipping again. This takes time, and it adds up to additional costs,” he said.
With the new supply chain hub, companies will be able to tap these specialised
cargo handling services under one roof within the same free trade zone as Tuas
Port, he noted. Custom duties are not charged on goods that are stored in such
free trade zones.
“We want businesses to use Tuas Port as a convenient and efficient
one-stop shop, not only for their physical goods but also as a control tower to
manage their inventory and global supply chain flows,” PM Wong added.
Construction of the facility comes as competition gets increasingly
sharp in the shipping industry. PM Wong said other major ports like Shanghai
and Rotterdam were upgrading their infrastructure to serve larger vessels and
attract “mega” shipping alliances. He
added that many ports around the world are also offering services beyond just
moving containers. These include cold storage facilities and regional
distribution centres.
Furthermore, unlike ports in countries with large production and
consumption bases, Singapore has no hinterland of its own, he added.
In this environment, Singapore cannot afford to be complacent and has to
sharpen its competitive edge to remain the “preferred port of call”, PM Wong
said.
“We must continually invest not just in the Port of Singapore but also
in value-added capabilities so that we can keep on adapting and staying abreast
of changing trends.”
These trends include the growing scale of shipping, with ships today
built to carry up to 25,000 containers, compared with 500 to 800 containers in
the 1950s, he said.
Shipping alliances, which allow major container shipping lines to share
vessels, port calls and trade routes, are also growing bigger, he said. What this means is that ports will need to
have the infrastructure to handle large ships and large numbers of containers
efficiently. Ports will also need to add value to shipping alliances to attract
the large fleets they operate.
“The major alliances today hold over 80 per cent of the world’s
container shipping capacity. Changes in their service networks could
significantly affect traffic to hubs like Singapore,” PM Wong added.
Singapore’s port terminals handled a record 39 million TEUs in 2023
and hope to cross 40 million TEUs in 2024, he said. Vessel arrivals and bunker
volumes have also risen in the first nine months of the year.
The completion of PSA’s new supply chain hub in Tuas in 2027 will
coincide with the closure of Keppel Distripark, which specialises in the
consolidation and distribution of cargo. PM
Wong said the new hub will expand the capacity currently available at Keppel
Distripark, allowing Singapore to attract more trade.
Tuas Port, which is being developed in four phases, will be able to
handle 65 million 20-foot containers when fully operational in the 2040s,
making it the world’s largest automated port. As at October, 10 of its 66
container berths are in operation, with one more berth expected to begin
operations by end-2024.
By 2027, operations at Tanjong Pagar, Keppel, and Brani terminals will
be shifted to the $20 billion mega port. Meanwhile, Pasir Panjang terminal will
remain open until its operations are also consolidated in Tuas by the 2040s