Containers are unloaded at ECT's newly-built Euromax Container Terminal in the Europort in Rotterdam. [Photo/Agencies] |
Firm hopes to cash in on trade from Silk Road Economic Belt
COSCO Pacific Ltd, a subsidiary of China COSCO Shipping Corp, has signed a share sale and purchase agreement to buy 35 percent of Euromax Terminal in Rotterdam from a subsidiary of Hutchison Holdings Ltd.
The acquisition comprises of 41.43 million euros ($47.34 million) for 35 percent of the share capital of Euromax and to pay for assignment on a dollar-for-dollar basis of 35 percent of the shareholder's loan, COSCO Shipping announced on Thursday.
ECT Participations BV is a subsidiary of Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing's Hutchison Port Holdings Ltd, which is a private holding company incorporated in the British Virgin Islands and manages port assets in 25 countries and regions.
Euromax is principally engaged in the operation of Euromax Terminal Rotterdam, which is located at the Port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands.
It is an automatic container terminal which commenced operation in mid-2010. The terminal has an annual handling capacity of 3.2 million twenty-foot equivalent units. Throughput at the terminal totaled 2.28 million TEUs in 2015.
Xu Lirong, chairman of COSCO Shipping, said Rotterdam is situated at the end point in Europe of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the new Asia-Europe economic corridor. Based on medium to long-term development trends, the Port of Rotterdam will continue to be Europe's main hub.
The Port of Rotterdam has been the base port of COSCO Shipping in northwestern Europe for more than a decade. It is located at the junction of the land-based Silk Road Economic Belt and ocean-going 21st Century Maritime Silk Road. These two trading routes cover about 4.4 billion people in Asia, Europe and Africa.
"COSCO Shipping will continue to deploy ultra-large container vessels to the European route, and the Port of Rotterdam will be the main anchor hub in the region," said Xu.
The company sealed a deal to purchase a majority stake in the Greece's biggest harbor-Piraeus Port in April, a move that would give the shipper control over one of the country's key thoroughfares into Europe.
"The container terminal investment in the Port of Rotterdam is not only in line with COSCO Shipping's strategy of investing in overseas hubs, but also coordinates with its hub strategy, providing comprehensive terminal services to the shipping fleets of Ocean Alliance," said Dong Liwan, a shipping industry professor at Shanghai Maritime University.