Scrap Order on
Waiver of Detention charges: Container Carriers Tells Government
Carriers say they have taken steps to
ease the pain for the EXIM trade
Global
container shipping lines, operating from India, are taking the Government
head-on by declining to comply with a directive to waive container detention
charges levied by them from importers stating that the orders issued by various
authorities in this regard “were not legally binding on them”.
The
Director General of Shipping (DGS) and the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and
Customs (CBIC) have asked carriers not to collect container detention charges
following a Shipping Ministry order to facilitate exporters and importers hit
by the lockdown restrictions.
“These
notifications are not legally binding on the lines and has to be rescinded.
Instead the matter should be left to the lines, to consider each case on its
merits,” Sunil Vaswani, executive director, the
Container Shipping Lines Association (CSLA) India, said. CSLA India is a lobby
group for global container carriers operating from/to India that includes
Maersk Line, MSC and CMA CGM.
On
April 27, DGS Amitabh Kumar had asked CSLA in a letter to share details of its
member lines who are complying with the government order, citing complaints
that carriers were not extending the benefits to their customers.
As
the stand-off continued, Shipping Minister Mansukh Mandaviya
warned that he will “quarantine” the carriers if they refused to follow the
government order on waiver of various charges including the container detention
charges.
Acting
on a complaint from the importers, Kolkata Port Trust has barred, pending
further investigation and compliance, non-vessel owning common carriers
(NVOCCs) such as Sea Hawk Lines India Pvt Ltd and
PORTRADE Shipping Agencies Pvt Ltd from operating at
the port for levying container detention charges “in violation” of the
government order.
Carriers
say they have taken steps to ease the pain for the EXIM trade.
The
shipping lines have facilitated the process for delivering containers, even in
the absence of original documents, thereby “exposing themselves to immense
financial risks”. Many shipping lines have already independently offered
additional free days on container detention from March 22 till April 14,
despite these “notifications not being legally binding on them”, CSLA said.
Carriers
have continued to call at Indian ports, carrying import containers, despite
having to sail out light due to very low export volumes, thereby increasing the
per unit cost of operation of vessels.
“Since
March 25, forty-six sailings of scheduled services had to be blanked /
cancelled and some of the services had to be rationalized, resulting in huge
costs to the lines for the idling of vessels,” Vaswani
stated.
The
non-clearance of cargo by the importers has led to acute congestion at
terminals, container freight stations (CFS) and inland container depots (ICDs)
across the country.
Blaming
the delay in evacuation of containers by the importers to the orders issued on
waiver of container detention charges, CSLA said, “The importers, therefore,
have no incentive to effect early clearances and are instead using the
containers as free warehousing space for storage of cargo”.
The
blanket waivers, Vaswani said, are proving to be
“counter-productive” and the delay in clearances is proving to be “detrimental”
to the country’s exports as ports, CFSs and ICDs are facing a space crunch to
handle export volumes.
“The
equipment of the lines is blocked with uncleared
import cargo thereby leaving hardly any containers to cater to the export
shipments, particularly once the surge in the bookings happen, after the
lock-down is lifted. This will harm the exporters more than anybody else,” he
said.
Shipping
being the backbone of the logistics industry, merely looking at the issue
solely from an exporter or importer point of view, would endanger the entire
supply chain.
If
shipping – the strongest service provider in the logistics chain with ships and
containers – itself collapses, then all this will
become meaningless, Vaswani added.