India’s ambition to become a manufacturing powerhouse as well as the world’s factory has got a boost with a key project by Adani Group getting the government nod. Adani’s Vizhinjam Port in Kerala has received the shipping ministry’s approval for operating as India’s first transshipment port, it was reported. It will be India’s first full-fledged deepwater transshipment port. Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone Ltd (APSEZ) had started this project at Vizhinjam in December 2015.
What is a transshipment port?
A transshipment port is a kind of transit hub where cargo from one ship is transferred to another ship on the way to its final destination. Mostly transshipment happens to transfer smaller cargos on to bigger mother ships which saves shipment cost and time. Since all the ports in the world are not directly linked, transshipment ports are needed.
There are several other reasons why transshipment is done. Often the port of origin or destination is not big enough for large vessels that ply directly between two destinations. In such a case, either cargo is sent in smaller vessels to a transshipment port to be loaded on bigger vessels or unloaded at a transshipment port onto smaller vessels which would head to the port with less depth which can’t harbour large vessels. This is India’s foremost reason to have a transshipment port.
Singapore, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Busan and Hong Kong are among the world’s biggest transshipment ports.
Why Adani’s Vizhinjam port is important for India
Located strategically between the Suez Canal and the Strait of Malacca, the port will put India on the map of global sea trade. With this port, India will be able to attract ultra-large container and cargo vessels for the first time, boosting container and cargo traffic. The Modi government is working on a Maritime India Vision 2030 that seeks to develop world-class mega ports, transshipment hubs and modernize infrastructure at an estimated investment of Rs 1.25 lakh crore. The port will also be a boost to India’s ambitions to become an alternative manufacturing destination to China. Lower logistic and shipping costs and greater cargo and container capacity are beneficial for domestic manufacturers.
The port aims to handle one million containers annually, surpassing even Singapore, Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan has said, calling it “India’s premier mother port”. The port, boasting container transshipment capabilities and proximity to major shipping routes, is going to be a game-changer for Kerala’s infrastructure and development, he said.
Once commissioned a few months later, the port, one of the world’s biggest, will be India’s first hub for transhipment which means transferring cargo from an original ship to another, bigger mother ship at a port on the way to the cargo’s final destination. The port will provide large-scale automation for quick turnaround of vessels, with the ability to handle Megamax containerships.
The port will attract the world’s biggest container ships. Located near the southernmost tip of the country, a strategic location to tap into prominent global shipping routes, the port will allow India to grab a bigger slice of the international maritime trade currently dominated by China, Bloomberg has reported.
The proximity to the international shipping routes that account for 30% of global cargo traffic and a natural channel that goes up to 24 meters below the sea makes the port an ideal hub for some of the world’s biggest ships to call in, as per Bloomberg. Until now, the biggest container ships have been skipping India because its harbors weren’t deep enough to handle such vessels and docking at neighboring ports such as Colombo, Dubai, Singapore and Malaysia.
Poor shipping connectivity has hindered India’s integration into the global value chain, the Reserve Bank of India said in a 2022 report. India’s container traffic was only 17 million TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent unit, is a measure of volume in units of twenty-foot long