Mundra Port to Gain Access in the
Dedicated Freight Corridor from Dadri, JNPT Upset
over Delay
A potential delay of at least two years in getting
connected to the game-changing and keenly awaited Dedicated Freight Corridor
(DFC) is making state-owned Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT), India’s busiest
container gateway, jittery.
JNPT Chairman Sanjay Sethi
admitted that the DFC connectivity is “behind schedule”, which could adversely
affect its growth prospects. “Probably, two years from now, we should be having
DFC operational,” he said at a media conference on Thursday.
“We have been pushing for it because if it goes to Mundra port first, obviously, we are affected in an adverse
way. That’s a fact. So, we have been making a noise everywhere, wherever possible,
to expedite it,” he added.
The 1,500-km-long western DFC linking Dadri
in Uttar Pradesh with JNPT has now been extended to Mundra,
which is expected to be linked to the freight-only, high-speed corridor by this
December.
“From the government’s point of view, obviously, if that
(Mundra) comes first, they will do that first. From
JNPT’s point of view, the original project was meant for JNPT. From the
economy’s point of view, it is not like a private or a non-major port doesn’t
contribute; they contribute equally. We have nothing about that. But, as a
separate entity, we also compete with private ports at some level…please
expedite this so that we start to benefit from it as early as possible,” Sethi said.
Cargo diversion
Port sources said that “DFC is the biggest threat to JNPT
if it gets late” due to the potential to divert container cargo to rival ports
on the western coast. Sethi said container vessels
have skipped some services at JNPT as a fallout of the cornavirus
outbreak and the new global rule for ships to use low-sulphur
fuel oil.
Gateway Terminals India (GTI), one of the five terminals
operating at JNPT, has reported four skips already — vessels that were supposed
to come did not do so. It expects some more vessel skips in the coming months as
ships are undergoing scrubber re-fitments to comply with the rule on using low-sulphur fuel oil, he said.
These issues could hurt JNPT’s ability to handle more
containers this year than FY19. The port handled 4.205 million TEUs between
April 2019 and January 2020, compared to 4.248 million TEUs during the same
period in FY19. For the full FY19, JNPT handled 5.133 million TEUs.
“Only after another three weeks or so, I should be in a
better position to assess the overall impact. Right now, we are saying at least
we will be able to do the same as last year. I’m making a conservative comment.
These two or three issues are completely out-of-control things. At this stage,
definitely, there will be some impact is what we foresee. But, mostly, it would
be made up in the next two or three months,” Sethi
added.