Container terminal demand forecast still positive amid trade wars

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Despite worries over tariff and trade wars, the medium-term outlook for global container port demand growth is positive, thanks to strong underlying economic momentum across the world’s major economies, said a new report from Drewry.

While there may be clouds on the horizon in the form of tariff and trade war fears, economic fundamentals are likely to win out in the long run, according to the Global Container Terminal Operators Annual Review and Forecast 2018 of Drewry, a global shipping consultancy.

Against this positive picture, near-term container port capacity expansion will remain relatively subdued following several years of under investment, particularly in greenfield projects. As a result, average utilization levels are expected to rise markedly across almost all regions of the world by 2022, the report said.

Drewry’s latest five-year container port demand forecast, released last month, is based on average global growth of just under 6% per annum, lifting world container port throughput in this period by almost 240 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs).

“The global container port industry is now of such a scale that 6% annual growth equates to around 45 million additional TEU each year, broadly equivalent to the size of the world’s largest container port, Shanghai,” said the report.

Bottom-up capacity projections on a terminal-by-terminal basis present a more conservative picture, with global container port capacity projected to increase by around 125 million TEUs by 2022, a growth rate of just over 2% per annum. This is clearly well below projected demand and reflects the cautious investor sentiment towards greenfield projects over the last few years, said Drewry.

As a consequence, average utilization at the global level is forecast to increase significantly from 68% in 2017 to around 80% by 2022. Average regional utilization levels are projected to increase most sharply in Greater China, North Asia, Southeast Asia, and West Coast South America.

“Assuming our demand projections are well founded, and the threat of trade wars dissipates, we expect many terminal operators and investors to review and potentially increase their activity levels in terms of new capacity additions,” said Neil Davidson, Drewry’s senior analyst for ports and terminals.

“Crucially however, all capacity is not the same,” added Davidson. “Indeed for certain port markets, individual ports and specific terminals, the need for additional capacity may be even greater. Rapid growth in ship sizes has increased the segmentation of terminal capacity, such that today, all ‘deep-sea’ capacity simply cannot handle all ‘deep-sea’ vessels. It is often the case that berths with the infrastructure to handle the largest ships are the most highly utilized and in short supply, while older deep-water berths are under-utilized.”

Photo: John Fielding