Hello Readers,
The big news of the week in the Indian shipping industry was the move by French container line CMA CGM Group to reflag two of its container ships to the
Indian flag. In other words, the two container vessels will be registered in India, fly the Indian flag and will be counted as Indian tonnage.
While two other top notch global shipping companies â Japanâs Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Ltd and Singapore headquartered BW LPG - have earlier registered their ships in India by setting up local units, this is the first time that one of the top global container carriers have registered container ships
in India.
For an economy striving to become $5 trillion soon, Indiaâs container shipping capacity is nothing to rave about with hardly 30 ships operating under the Indian flag.
Again, except for state-run Shipping Corporation of India Ltd, no Indian fleet owner is present in the mainline container shipping sector, an issue that has always roiled the countryâs export-import trade because they are at the âmercyâ of foreign carriers. SCI owns and runs just three
container ships and one hired ship.
India missed the container shipping bus when the world opted to move their merchandise in steel containers decades ago due to lack of policy and foresight. This has hurt the countryâs EXIM trade, both in terms of instability in freight rates and lack of shipping capacity and equipment to move
goods.
CMA CGMâs move would be keenly watched by other global container lines to gauge the efficacy and commercial as well as financial feasibility of running Indian flagged container ships, ahead of following in the footsteps of the French line.
That apart, the Indian registered ships of CMA CGM would benefit from a so-called cabotage rule under which Indiaâs coastal trade (shipping cargo on local routes along the coast) is reserved for Indian flag ships and foreign ships are allowed to operate only when locally flagged ships are not
available.
The fact that CMA CGM chose the Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City), India's first and currently the only International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) operating under the Special Economic Zone Act, to own the ships is an indication of the tax free enclaveâs growing popularity as a
platform to undertake ship leasing activities compared to the Domestic Tariff Area (DTA).
ET Infra first reported in-depth on CMA CGMâs decision and what it means for Indian shipping.
Read hereHereâs a quick look at other important updates from the week:
Container train operators feel the heatOcean liners are going all-in on end-to-end logisticsâand container train
operators are starting to feel the pressure. With shipping giants extending their services deeper inland, rail-based logistics companies find themselves fighting for a shrinking pie.
Read the full storySyama Prasad Mookerjee Port faces rough watersOne of Indiaâs oldest ports, Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port in Kolkata, is struggling after the government pulled back dredging support, raising alarms
about operational viability. Will this key gateway survive the turbulence?
Catch the full updateBangladesh-India trade tensions escalateIn a major setback, Dhaka has shut land ports amid rising trade tensions, and Delhi has revoked transit rights in retaliation. This diplomatic flare-up could
ripple through regional connectivity and bilateral trade routes.
Explore the storyUS slaps new port fees on Chinese shipsIn a fresh move to tackle the growing trade imbalance with China, the United States has introduced new port fees on Chinese ships. A bold strategy or a
potential flashpoint for a trade war? Time will tell.
Know more here
Stay tuned for more!
Weâll be back next week with more exclusive insights, expert views and critical updates from the world of infrastructure. Until then, keep building!