Cargo Handling Plummets As Weather Pummels Coast

13 Days(s) Ago    👁 56
cargo handling plummets as weather pummels coast

Horrific weather along South Africas coast pushed container throughput down to its lowest levels in weeks, the latest Cargo Movement Update compiled by the South African Association of Freight Forwarders (Saaff) and Business Unity SA (Busa) has found.

For the week ending April 12, commercial ports handled an average of 6 180 containers per day, significantly down from the 8 061 containers processed the previous week.

To put matters in perspective, throughput had decreased from more than 8800 to less than 7 200 week-on-week (w-o-w), towards the end of March, heralding a new low for container handling and underscoring the latest reported w-o-w depressed figures of 6180.

Terrible weather, equipment breakdowns, and a system failure dominated port operations, Saaff and Busa said.

At the Port of Cape Town, natures merciless effect was particularly impactful as more than 60 operational hours were lost.

In contrast, equipment breakdowns, a system failure, and adverse weather constituted the majority of delays in Durban.

Elsewhere, relentless weather also lashed the countrys ports, characterising operations in East London and Port Elizabeth (Gqberha) with strong winds, rain and vessel ranging.

At the Port of Richards Bay about 30 operational hours were lost due to high swells and poor weather conditions.

On the rail freight side of things, minimal reports were received for the same week ending April 12.

According to information received from Transnet Freight Rail, there were no indications of any major incidents on the Container Corridor (ConCor) line from the Port of Durban to Gauteng.

Current data shows, though, that year-on-year levels on the ConCor line are down 9%, whislt domestic cargo is up 17%.

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