City to
build inland container depots
HCM CITY - HCM
City has proposed building 10 new inland container depots to reduce the
overload of traffic on roads as well as enhance connectivity among roads
leading to seaports in the city.
The roads have been congested
for years, according to city authorities.
The depots, to be located in
the city outskirts to the northeast, east and west of the city, will be
connected to seaports in HCM City and the southern province of Bà Rịa-Vũng
Tàu.
The depots would be built at
Đông Nam Industrial Park, Tây Bắc Industrial Park in the outlying district of
Củ Chi, Sài Gòn Hi-tech Park (SHTP) in District 9, and Tân Kiên Commune in
Bình Chánh District, according to authorities.
The depots are expected to
play an important role in transporting goods between HCM City and neighbouring
provinces.
The Transport Department has
asked the city administration to adjust the master plan to build an inland
container depot at Đông Nam Industrial Park in Củ Chi until 2020 with a
vision to 2030.
The depot in Củ Chi, covering
an area of 10 hectares, would be 11 km from An Hạ Bridge, near National Road
22 – Lê Lợi – Quang Trung – Đặng Thúc Vịnh roads. It would have a capacity of
150,000TEUs per year by 2020.
Lê Hoàng Minh, deputy
director of the Transport Department, said the depot would help to
significantly reduce overloading on National Road 22.
Under the proposal sent to
the Ministry of Transport, HCM City will build the Tân Kiên depot with an
area of 50ha at the meeting point between Võ Văn Kiệt Avenue and Trung Lương
Expressway.
Lê Thành Đại, deputy head of
the management board of SHTP, said about 800 container trucks travel
regularly from SHTP to Cát Lái Port in District 2, creating a traffic burden
in the area.
Đại said the city should
build a depot to serve SHTP, which would help reduce traffic congestion and
take full advantage of waterways from SHTP to Cát Lái Port via Ông Nhiêu
canal.
Speaking at a recent meeting
with the Transport Department, Lê Văn Khoa, vice chairman of the city’s
People’s Committee, said it was essential to build the depots in District 9
and Củ Chi District, which play a key role in the city’s socio-economic
development.
Khoa urged the departments of
Transport as well as Planning and Architecture, and the committees of
District 9 and Củ Chi District, to carefully study the project to prevent
waste.
He also asked agencies to
call for investment from businesses to build the depots.
HCM City and its neighbouring
provinces have 12 inland container depots, including Tân Cảng, Sóng Thần,
Biên Hòa, Transimex, Tanamexco-Tây Nam and Sotrans, many of which are
connected with roads but not waterways.
Infrastructure facilities
near ports are almost always overloaded.
All of these have contributed
to raising transport costs, thus reducing the competitiveness of the domestic
logistics sector.
There are 1,300 logistics
firms, with more than 60 per cent of them in HCM City, mainly operating in
shipping and delivering, transport, warehousing, ports, loading and
uploading, distribution, customs procedures and integrated logistics
services.
Seventy-two per cent of local
logistics companies are small- or medium-sized, and only 5-7 per cent of
human resources are properly trained.
A Việt Nam
Logistics Association spokesperson said some major seaports are operating at
below capacity due to the lack of road connectivity, but others with good
road connectivity are overloaded and cannot keep up with increasing demand
from logistics companies.
Viet Nam News
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Thứ Bảy, 24 tháng 12, 2016
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