The Zhen Hua 15, a heavy load cargo carrier sailing from the East China sea, made history by unloading at Adani’s Vizhinjam port in India. This achievement has put India on the map for the world’s biggest container ships.
Vizhinjam International Seaport Project
- The Vizhinjam International Transhipment Deepwater Multipurpose Seaport is an ambitious project taken up by the Government of Kerala.
- It is designed to primarily cater to the transshipment and gateway container business with provision for a cruise terminal, liquid bulk berth and facilities for additional terminals.
- The port is currently being developed with a Public Private Partnership , with Adani Ports Private Limited with a component structured on a design, build, finance, operate, and transfer (“DBFOT”) basis.
- It is strategically situated near Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. Its location along the southern coast of India provides easy access to international shipping routes.
- It is positioned to compete with global transshipment hubs like Colombo, Singapore, and Dubai, reducing the cost of container movement to and from foreign destinations.
- The port boasts a natural depth of more than 18 meters, which can be further scaled up to 20 meters.
- This depth is crucial as it enables the port to accommodate large vessels and mother ships with substantial cargo capacities.
- Initial capacity in the first phase is set at one million (twenty-foot equivalent units)TEUs, with potential for expansion to 6.2 million TEUs.
- Project Progress:
- Expected to generate 5,000 direct job opportunities and stimulate an industrial corridor and cruise tourism.
- The project is approximately 65.46% complete. The project has experienced delays over the years, mainly due to factors like natural disasters, protests, and logistical challenges.
- The current timeline anticipates the first phase’s operational readiness by December 2024.
India Needs a Deepwater Container Transshipment Port
- India has 12 major ports. However, the country lacks a landside mega-port and terminal infrastructure to deal with ultra-large container ships.
- Hence, nearly 75% of India’s transshipment cargo is handled at ports outside India, mainly Colombo, Singapore, and Klang.
- In fiscal 2021-22, the total transshipment cargo of India was about 4.6 million TEUs, out of which about 4.2 million TEUs were handled outside India.
- Developing a port into a Transshipment Hub will accrue significant benefits such as forex savings, foreign direct investment, increased economic activity at other Indian Ports, development of related logistics infrastructure, employment generation, improved operation/logistics efficiencies and increase in revenue share.
- It also encourages related businesses, including ship services, logistics, and bunkering.
- A deepwater container transshipment port can attract a large share of the container transshipment traffic which is now being diverted to Colombo, Singapore and Dubai.
