New
Lien Chieu terminal to ease Danang Port congestion
The
Vietnam government is planning construction of a major new expansion to the
country’s third largest seaport located in the central city of Danang on the
shores of the East Sea, said experts at a recent forum in Hanoi.
A pre-feasibility study for the
project at Lien Chieu, which has a budgeted cost of roughly US$1.48 billion,
is under review by City officials that want to significantly expand the
Danang Port’s capacity.
The
study, prepared by the engineering consulting firm of Tediport, lays out
plans for the work to be completed in 3-phases of construction. The first
phase projected to cost US332 million would add 1.87 million tons of capacity
by 2020.
Phases
two and three would increase capacity by 17.53 million tons by 2030 and 46
million tons by 2050 at incremental estimated costs of US$353 million and
US$792 million, respectively.
Unfortunately,
said speakers at the conference, the Danang Port is much too far away from Ho
Chi Minh City to readily benefit from the overcapacity the country’s
southernmost port currently is experiencing.
One
of the two main terminals at the Danang Port, Tien Sa, is already operating
at maximum capacity, with shippers reporting delays as well as over
overloading at storage warehouses in the region.
Ground
was broken on a US$49 million project last July to bump up the capacity of
the Tien Sa terminal to 12 million tons of cargo per annum and enable it to
handle container ships with deadweight tonnage of 70,000.
Official
figures showed the terminals at the Danang Port handled a combined 146,000
twenty-foot-equivalent units in the first half of this year, a 19% on-year
rise against the same six-month period in 2015.
A
record setting 6.5 million tons of cargo passed through the port for the
whole of 2015, said speakers at the conference.
The
pre-feasibility study proposed that the new Lien Chieu terminal be developed
on a public private partnership basis with funding provided by a combination
of funding from the city of Danang along with bank loans and ODA.
The
study is not clear which country would provide the ODA for the project but
speakers at the conference suggested Japan as the most likely prospect to
provide the required funds.
Their
rational was that the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), agreed
last April to provide US$781 million for additional port and road
infrastructure at the Lach Huyen deep-water port in the northern city of
Haiphong.
The
northern region is home to numerous Japanese foreign-invested manufacturing
companies that would benefit from the Haiphong port expansion scheduled to
open in May 2018, said the JICA in explaining its reasoning for providing the
funding.
A
similar line of reasoning would apply to the Lien Chieu terminal, said the
speakers, as the central region is heavily invested by Japanese businesses
who would readily benefit from the expanded capacity.
Vietnam
is expected to continue to lead Asian trade growth over the coming decades,
said the speakers, noting several forecasts that have projected solid growth
for the next two decades.
These
projections combined with those forecasting record growth among ASEAN show
sufficient cargo volumes would be available to justify the large
infrastructure and port investment in the Lien Chieu terminal.
The
decision to move forward with the project by the government is prudent, the
speakers at the conference concluded.
VOV
|
Thứ Hai, 28 tháng 11, 2016
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