Cargo shipping increases in Shanghai (China Daily) Updated: 2005-08-10 09:01
Ports in Shanghai observed a record monthly freight volume of 39.78 million
tonnes in July, approximately a 14 per cent increase than in June.
Xu Peixing, director of Shanghai Municipal Port Administration Bureau,
attributed the increase to the recent renminbi appreciation and the growing
economy of the Yangtze Delta, which led to a rise in international cargo
shipping.
It constituted about 44 per cent of all the freight the ports handled in the
first seven months of this year.
"The modest adjustment of currency has lowered purchasing expenses, therefore
encouraging importing," Xu said.
The freight Shanghai imported in July is approximately 15 per cent more than
in June.
Among them, crude oil and iron ore experienced the fastest growth.
The volume of imported crude oil grew 51.5 per cent from June and 83.6 per
cent from last July.
"China's rapid economic development has caused the rising consumption of
crude oil," Xu said.
By the end of July, Shanghai ports sent abroad cargo of 48.15 million tonnes,
a 28.7 per cent increase compared to last year.
Apart from textile products -- constituting more than 50 per cent of all
exporting, exports of machinery and electronic products reached 9.31 million
tonnes in the first seven months, nearly 20 per cent of all exported goods.
"Shanghai only shipped out 9 million tonnes of such products last year," said
Ye Xing, an official from the bureau.
Xu said that industrial zones like Zhangjiang in Pudong and Caohejing near
Xujiahui contributed most of the goods.
Shanghai also witnessed a record volume of 10.16 million TEUs (twenty-foot
equivalent units) in the first seven months, a 26.8 per cent increase from last
year.
Nearly 80 per cent of them (7.90 million TEUs) are international, a 28 per
cent increase from 2004.
The United States remains the biggest trading partner, taking more than 24
per cent of all trading products. The European Union is the next at 18 per cent.
Shanghai, the largest commercial city in China, is endeavouring to build
itself into an international shipping centre.
The Shanghai port has witnessed a container handling capacity of more than
14.50 million TEUs last year, and is expected to exceed 17 million TEUs in 2005.
An ongoing deepwater port project in Shanghai, the Yangshan Port is expected
to line up 33 deepwater berths capable of holding large container ships upon
completion in 2020.
It will finish its first-phase construction and open by the end of this year.
The port is supposed to become the shipping centre of northeastern Asia.
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