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Increasing congestion at ports due to cancelled sailings out of India

Release time: 2020-08-05   Browsing:614次

CONTAINER trades out of India are faced with increasing congestion, due to a combination of blanked sailings, equipment shortages and carriers unable to clear a backlog of bookings.


According to forwarding sources in the country, every carrier is facing a "space crunch across India on all trade lanes and services".


Sources added that this was largely due to blanked sailings on almost every trade lane, container shut-outs and rollovers "on every vessel", an ever-lengthening list of bookings due to cancelled sailings, growing congestion at transshipment facilities "due to shortage of manpower and voided vessels and limited vessel berthing windows, also due to "manpower shortage and other operational issues".


According to liner database eeSea, this month carriers have withdrawn 24 per cent of capacity on the India-Far East trade, blanking 23 out of 120 scheduled sailings. Next month, a further 17 per cent capacity is expected to be withdrawn - with 17 blankings already announced.


Maersk recently announced new blankings on the India-Far East FS12 and FS13 services during August, with frequency effectively reduced from weekly to fortnightly.


"We will be ensuring the impact to our customers is minimised by rebooking the cargo to best available product as there is sufficient capacity available via these alternative services," the line said.


Freight forwarding sources in India disputed that there was enough capacity and said there was a similar situation on trades to North American and European ports, with voided sailings every other week - "and we are given to understand that situation is likely to continue for another three-to-four weeks". The sources added that this was having an impact on bookings and procurement of export containers.


"Carriers are not able to issue bookings on immediate vessels even though the schedule is there - and sometimes they are releasing it on two-to-three-weeks advance sailings, so there is struggle to meet customers' requirement for immediate dispatch of their cargo, as bookings are getting declined on current week sailings.


"This means all carriers are flooded with bookings and there are extreme space issues and huge booking rejections," one said, according to London's Loadstar.


Meanwhile, the continuing problem of clearing import containers due to lockdown