Within a gap of just two days, India’s leading major ports -- Paradip in
Odisha and Kandla in
Gujarat -- have crossed the 100 million tonnes (mt) mark in cargo handling this
financial year. While Paradip port achieved the milestone on December 9, Kandla
did it on December 11.
Paradip Port Authority
said it achieved the 100 mt mark nine days ahead of the previous year, and
Deendayal Port Authority said it achieved the milestone 24 days ahead of last
year.
In an official statement earlier this week, the PPA
said, “The Port is poised to set all-time record cargo handling of 150 mt in
current fiscal. Various system improvement measures, introduced by the port
during this year, fuelled growth. Outbound Iron Ore and Pellet has shown 2.23% growth in comparison to
the previous fiscal. Coastal Thermal Coal handling constitutes more than 30 per
cent of total cargo volume handled at the port and it has shown 3.57 per cent
growth. Similarly, containerised cargo volume has grown by 123.09 per cent and
Gypsum & flux volume has surged by 26.55 per cent Y-o-Y in the current
fiscal. Thus Paradip port is emerging as a coastal shipping hub of the
country.”
Kandla, which is looking to regain its position as
the top major port in the country, said it is targeting to handle 150 mt of
cargo this year. “DPA’s achievement
has been bolstered by significant growth across various cargo categories. Key
imports, including POL, phosphoric acid, liquid chemicals, fertilisers, and
timber logs, as well as exports like edible oils, salt, sugar, and steel coils,
have all contributed to this milestone. Notably, a record surge in salt exports
by November 2024 highlighted the port’s operational efficiency,” the port
stated on Friday.
“By implementing a series of strategic
initiatives, DPA has aimed to provide competitive tariffs and reduce the
turnaround time (TRT) of ships and trucks, thereby minimising logistics costs
for its stakeholders. Key measures include the rationalisation of Harbour
Mobile Crane (HMC) charges for pet coke and thermal coal, rebates for
midstream-handled cargo such as coal, coke, and timber logs, and optimised
storage policies for imported fertilisers. Additional
cost reductions have been introduced for salt cargo through rebates on wharfage
and vessel-related charges, as well as revisions to HMC hire charges and
berthing policies to accommodate various cargo types, including bitumen vessels
at dry cargo jetties,” DPA added.
In 2023-24, Paradip
Port had a vessel turnaround time of 41.61 hours, while it was 54.24 hours for
Kandla. Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Maharashtra has the best turnaround time of 26
hours. During the financial year 2023-24, Kandla Port handled 131 mt tonnes of
cargo, which is 4.17 per cent less than the port did in the previous year. In
contrast, Paradip Port handled over 145 million tonnes of cargo and overtook
Kandla Port as the top major port of India.