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Westports 2017 container throughput falls 9%

As expected Malaysian container terminal operator Westports saw its 2017 throughput slammed by realignments in the liner industry, with overall container throughput falling 9% to 9.02m teu.

Vincent Wee, Hong Kong and South East Asia Correspondent

February 9, 2018

2 Min Read
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Transhipment volumes were particularly hard hit, falling 16% to 6.2m teu, which Westports blamed on changes in the container shipping industry, arising from the formation of new global alliances and reconstituted service offerings and port of calls, as well as mergers and acquisitions which kicked in from April. Analysts had been predicting all along that the loss of CMA CGM’s volumes when it moved to PSA in Singapore following its acquisition of APL would hit the operator hard.

Volumes from other segments helped to ameliorate the losses from mainline transhipment however. The Intra-Asia segment showed favourable momentum with strong growth as throughput grew 8%, increasing its contribution to Westports overall volume to 57%.

Gateway volumes also grew strongly, rising 10%, and reflecting Malaysia’s strong exports as Westports helped to facilitate the country’s domestic economic activities.

In terms of finances, Westports noted that it has total outstanding Islamic Medium Term Notes of MYR1.5bn ($381m). Proceeds from its debt exercise were used to part-finance the development of the its container terminal expansion during the year, with capital expenditure for CT8 and CT9 coming up to over MYR800m.

Group md Ruben Emir Gnanalingam said: “The container shipping industry went through unprecedented realignment changes that affected almost all major liners in 2017. In addition to these, the industry witnessed a wave of mergers and acquisitions, of which some of our clients were involved in. These changes adversely affected our total transhipment volume last year, but Westports have transitioned successfully towards serving new services under the Ocean Alliance”.

Ruben noted that construction work at CT8 and CT9 has been completed and with its new facilities, Westports has boosted its container handling capacity to 14m teu a year.

“The added capacity will further strengthen Port Klang as the preeminent port for the nation’s gateway trade, while also being one of the main transhipment hubs in the region,” he added.

For the future, Westports also announced during the year that it had received Approval-in-Principle from the Malaysian government to expand its container terminal facilities from CT10 to CT19 although terms and conditions are still subject to further deliberations.

Looking ahead, Westports said “container throughput is expected to register modest growth rate of low single-digit percentage in 2018”.

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About the Author

Vincent Wee

Hong Kong and South East Asia Correspondent

Vincent Wee is Seatrade's Hong Kong correspondent covering Hong Kong and South China while also making use of his Malay language skills to cover the Malaysia and Indonesia markets. He has gained a keen insight and extensive knowledge of the offshore oil and gas markets gleaned while covering major rig builders and offshore supply vessel providers.

Vincent has been a journalist for over 15 years, spending the bulk of his career with Singapore's biggest business daily the Business Times, and covering shipping and logistics since 2007. Prior to that he spent several years working for Brunei's main English language daily as well as various other trade publications.

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