Container
throughput in Hong Kong will continue to see growth in the coming years, but in
order to cope with a projected future increase in throughput up to 2030, it is
necessary to enhance the handling capacity of the existing container terminals
and related infrastructural facilities, according to the ‘Study on the
Strategic Development Plan for Hong Kong Port (HKP) 2030.’
The HKP2030 study proposes a
series of enhancement measures. These include upgrading Stonecutters Island
Public Cargo Working Area to a modern container handling facility for
ocean-going or river trade vessels, thereby improving operational efficiency;
enabling the River Trade Terminal, which can accommodate ocean-going vessels,
to become a terminal for both ocean-going and river trade vessels; providing
additional barge berths at the Kwai Tsing Container Terminals (KTCT) to relieve
congestion caused by the increase of river cargo throughput; and making better
use of land and other facilities around the terminals to enhance operational
efficiency and accommodate future growth in transhipment.
The study forecasts that the total
container throughput of HKP would have average annual growth of 1.5 per cent up
to 2030, with total container throughput estimated to reach 31.5 million
20-foot equivalent units. The growth in international transhipment would be the
main driver.
The study notes that in
2001-2011 the throughput at the KTCT grew faster than the total HKP throughput.
This was attributed to the fact that cross-boundary transport has shifted from
trucking to river transport; the size of ocean going vessels has increased; and
international transhipment throughput, which was mainly concentrated at the
KTCT, has surged. As a result, facilities at the KCKT have been facing greater
demand than other port facilities. The HK2030 study proposes that the
Administration adopt appropriate measures to enhance the handling capacity of
the terminals so as to sustain the competitiveness of the HKP. The
study anticipates that the above measures should be sufficient to enhance
the handling capacity of existing container terminals to cope with future
growth. Therefore, the study finds that planning for Container Terminal 10
(CT10) before 2030 is not recommended.
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