India Asks Ports to Waive Demurrage and Other Charges

March 31, 2020

© babble / Adobe Stock
© babble / Adobe Stock

India has asked its ports to waive demurrage and other charges for any delays in arrival, berthing and other operations of ships caused by a 21-day lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus, a government statement said.

Although ports, which come under the purview of essential services, are operating with minimal staff to ensure smooth supplies of food and other essential goods, the lockdown has slowed down the operation.

The order, issued on Tuesday by the shipping ministry, has asked ports not to levy demurrage and other charges until April 14, when the lockdown ends.

To avoid paying damages to users for any delays in operations, some ports in India including those owned by Adani Ports & SEZ Ltd (APSEZ) have declared force majeure after the government announced the lockdown. 

(Reporting by Mayank Bhardwaj; Editing by Alison Williams)

Logistics News

Tackling Port Congestion with Visibility and Flexibility

Tackling Port Congestion with Visibility and Flexibility

DCSA Publishes Verified Gross Mass (VGM) Standard to Accelerate Digitalization of Container Weight Verification

DCSA Publishes Verified Gross Mass (VGM) Standard to Accelerate Digitalization of Container Weight Verification

SeaPort Manatee Refreshes, Upgrades Siemens Security Platform

SeaPort Manatee Refreshes, Upgrades Siemens Security Platform

Nuh Çimento Upgrades Port Operations with Electric Portal Crane

Nuh Çimento Upgrades Port Operations with Electric Portal Crane

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Rostec reports that defence exports have halved in the last 20 years as Russian orders dominate
California refinery closings spark race for pipeline to West Coast
After Heathrow Power Outage, UK sets up an energy resilience taskforce