Container Lines to Cut Terminal Cost in China

By Aiswarya Lakshmi
Sunday, March 5, 2017

 Eleven container liner transportation companies have promised to cut or standardize the Terminal Handling Charges (THC) in order to lower nearly 3.5 billion yuan burden of export enterprises each year, according to National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC). 

According to a report in Shanghai Daily, the shipping companies include  China COSCO Shipping Cooperation, Maersk line, Mediterranean shipping, Hapag-Lloyd AG, Evergreen Marine, Hyundai Merchant Marine, Nippon Yusen Kaisha, Mitsui OSK Lines, Sinotrans Shipping.
These companies have written to the NDRC and Ministry of Transport promising in standardize THC by adjusting cost standard. 
Chinese trading companies "reported" the excessively high and non-transparent surcharges to the NDRC. Shipping lines charge varied terminal handling fees depending on the loading and unloading costs at each port.
This move  is expected to save more than $500m annually for the country’s traders. THC is the major surcharge of sea transportation that is collected from export enterprises by container liner transportation companies. The entire reform will lower the burden of export enterprises to a certain degree. 
Categories: Ports Finance Logistics

Related Stories

New $1.2B Subsea Cables Factory Plan Set to Transform Port of Tyne

CMA CGM to Acquire Turkish Borusan's Logistics Subsidiary

Port of Oakland: Q1 Container Volume Reflects 6.3% Increase YoY

Current News

Logistical Bottlenecks Threaten Competitiveness of Brazilian Agribusiness

Africa Global Logistics to Invest in Inland Logistics

Hapag-Lloyd Freight Demand Boosted by US-China Trade Truce

Edison Receives First Delivery of US LNG From Venture Global

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News