The secretary general of the association, Ho Kim Lan, said on the sidelines of an annual conference of the association last Friday that cargo throughput at the ports had dipped as consumption in many importing markets had slackened. Many producers of textiles, garments, leather footwear and woodwork – which are among the country’s top export earners – have faced difficulties in production given economic contraction at home and abroad. “Numerous ports which are operating below capacity have seen slowing growth in cargo throughput,” he said. “The fees collected from cargo storage and loading services are also down as the ports are competing with one another.” Saigon Newport still managed to maintain good operations as its throughput in the first half represented some 48% of all of 2010 but Saigon port, Ben Nghe port, and the vegetable port reported their throughput accounted for 42%, 36%, and 32% of the whole 2010 respectively.
Throughput at Vietnam ports declines
Ports have seen a decline in cargo throughput due to falling consumer demand in importing countries and overcapacity at the Cai Mep-Thi Vai deepwater port complex, according to the Vietnam Seaports Association.
Source:
Saigon Times Online
Read count:
4160
Previous page
Back to top
Other news
- Technology renovation needs thinking-cap change (03/03/2009)
- Vietnamese-American scientist wins Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship (25/02/2009)
- Gene-altered crops to become popular in VN by 2015 (22/02/2009)
- 20 magnetic storms may hit Vietnam in 2009 (20/02/2009)
- First oil refinery to generate products on Feb. 22 (19/02/2009)
- HCM City to have technology trading floor (19/02/2009)
- Nation’s first stem cell bank inaugurated (17/02/2009)
- Finding labs in HCM City, very easy (11/02/2009)
- Vung Tau becomes the first-level urban center of the province by 2015 (11/02/2009)
- Vietnamese scientist honoured by US computer giant (09/02/2009)