
Gulftainer announced last week
that it will operate Port Canaveral in Florida
Dubai: Gulftainer, the Sharjah-based shipping container terminal
operator, expects to add a second
terminal in the United States to its portfolio in the first
quarter next year, Managing Director Peter Richards said on Tuesday.
Gulftainer, which operates terminals in the UAE, Saudi Arabia,
Iraq, Lebanon and Brazil, announced last week that it has signed a 35 year
lease for Port Canaveral, Florida, its first US terminal. It will start
operations at the port, which it estimates has an annual capacity of 200,000
TEUs, or the equivalent of 200,000 20-foot-long shipping containers, from July
1.
In 2006, DP World sold terminal operations in six US ports after
political and public pressure over security concerns of an Arab-state based
company operating the ports.
Gulftainer’s entry in the US market has seen it be approached by
“three or four entities” looking for a partnership to operate other ports in
the country. Richards said by phone that some of the entities have proposed
joint ventures and equity investments.
He said the next US port is likely to come in the first quarter
next year along with a terminal in Africa. He declined to state specifically
where. By 2020, Richards said Gulftainer could be operating as many as five
terminals in the US and a string of others in South America in countries like
Argentina, Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico.
Richards expects Port Canaveral will handle 50,000 TEUs in the
first year, 100,000 TEUs in the second year and 150,000 TEUs in the third.
Gulftainer believes that with $100 million (Dh367 million) of investment the
port can handle 750,000 TEUS, despite the proximity of ports in Miami,
Jacksonville and Tampa Bay.
“We will be as big as Miami and as big as Jacksonville in years to
come,” Richards said.
Last year, Port Miami handled 876,708 TEUs and Jacksonville
processed 936,973 TEUs.
“I’m vey bullish on cargo volumes,” Richards said.
Gulftainer is hopeful that a proposed rail link to Port Canaveral
will be backed by the local community, which has voiced its concerns of the
environmental impact of the construction.
“For us, it’s whether Canaveral wants to stay purely a regional
port with the rail link or a countrywide port with the rail link,” Richards
said.
“It’s very important for the port,” he also said.
Gulftainer has a clause in its contract to exit Canaveral if the
rail link is not built; however, Richards said the company “is not looking at
utilizing it.” Richards said the rail link could be built by 2017 or 2018.
No comments:
Post a Comment