Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Truck drivers protest at Northport over depot charges, delays




PORT KLANG: Container truck drivers who are unhappy with depot operators for allegedly exorbitant charges and causing delays, have taken their grouses to the streets.
Thousands protested at Bandar Sultan Sulaiman, outside Northport here Wednesday, from 10am, urging the Transport Ministry and Port Klang Authority (PKA) to help resolve this matter.
Several demonstrators were also seen hurling stones and empty bottles at trailers that refused to stop. The protest lasted for almost two hours. The drivers claimed they were acting on their own and were not from any group.
R. Pandian, 52, a container lorry driver for 30 years, said they resorted to a protest after depot operators raised handling fees.
"They used to charge RM5 and now it is between RM15 and RM20. We would not mind paying a standardised fee of RM20 if their services improved.
"But their services got from bad to worse and this has resulted in an average of one trip a day for all of us," he said, adding that drivers could previously make at least four trips, back and forth from the depots.
Meanwhile, PKA chairman Datuk Teh Kim Poo, when contacted, said the problem was beyond the authority's jurisdiction.
However, he said, he would see how he could handle this issue as Klang Barisan Nasional chief, by speaking to depot operators and truckers.

Source: BizStar

Klang ports facing a standstill

PORT KLANG: Trouble is looming at the ports here following a planned move by over 1,000 container truck drivers to stop transporting goods on Wednesday to protest against depot operators.
The drivers plan to hold a three-hour gathering from 9am outside Northport to express their frustrations over long-standing issues on delays and increases in depot gate charges, which they claim are affecting their earnings.
The planned demonstration is worrying Northport and West Port as their action may affect operations.
According to a driver who declined to be named, the service level at the depots had resulted in them having to wait for three to four hours to pick a box and transport it to the customer’s premises.
“We are only able to do one or two trips a day and this has reduced our earnings. Some of us are paid monthly wages of RM300 and our main income is from our daily trips. Some drivers are not paid monthly wages.
“We will be able to do six or more trips if the depot operators are more efficient,” he said, adding that previously it would only take them 45 minutes to pick a container.
A haulage company executive said the depot operators had introduced gate charges of between RM10 and RM16 per container so that they could invest in new equipment to improve service. Previously, it was RM5.
“But, until now, nothing has changed and it has severely impacted the livelihood of these much needed professional drivers,” he said, adding that attempts to resolve the issue had been unsuccessful.
Depot operators are paid by shipping lines to store their containers while haulage operators work on behalf of the shippers to move the containers.
An Association of Malaysian Hauliers official said he hoped that the drivers would not go ahead with the stop-work action because this would adversely affect the ports.
In an interview with StarBiz on Feb 20, association president Datuk Che Azizuddin Che Ismail had admitted that haulage operators were still having problems with container depot operators, suggesting that depots should be placed inside port areas rather than outside.
“It’s easier and cheaper if all containers go back to the port. It’s not productive to have a container 10km away from the port,” he said, adding that although some ports in Malaysia had on-dock depots, it was still not efficient as there was only one gate for trucks to collect and send the boxes.
Source: BizStar

Freight forwarders cry foul over exorbitant port charges

Thursday, 10 November 2011


Ten trade associations from various industries have collectively submitted a memorandum to the government, raising concern over exorbitant port charges that they claim are affecting profits and incurring unnecessary higher costs to their operations.

The associations collectively seek the urgent intervention of the Special Taskforce to Facilitate Business (Pemudah), Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), Ministry of Transport, Ministry of Domestic Trade, Cooperatives & Consumerism, Port Klang Authority, Malaysian National Shippers Council and the relevant government agencies to issue clear, enforceable guidelines on the landside charges that shipping lines are allowed to charge.

As of press time yesterday, they had yet to get a response or reply to their memorandum from the government. "Since 2009, new bloated charges are being implemented and now such charges are becoming standard charges for all the ports in Malaysia, and this seriously affects freight forwarders businesses," Federation of Malaysian Freight Forwarders (FMFF) president Alvin Chua Seng Wah told The Malaysian Reserve in an interview.

The FMFF — together with the Malaysia Hardware, Machinery & Building Material Dealers’ Association, Associated Chinese Chambers of Commerce and Industry of Malaysia, Steel Wire Association of Malaysia, Building Materials Distributors Association of Malaysia, Malaysia Mould & Die Association, Federation of Malaysian Foundry & Engineering Industries Associations, Machinery and Equipment Manufacturers Association, Malaysian Indian Metal Traders and Recyclers Association, Malaysia Hardware Wholesaler Association and Metal Dealers’ Association Selangor & Kuala Lumpur — jointly submitted the memorandum to MITI and Pemudah, together with various other related agencies last month. The memorandum stressed that the situation has led to significant increase in shipping costs over the last few years and, if left unchecked, will severely affect the competitive edge of the local industries.

"Our main concerns are that over the recent years, shipping lines have been increasing and creating new landside charges which are dubious in nature and do not reflect the services they provide," said the memorandum.

"They are increasing our cost of doing business by merely creating charges without any input and we are perturbed with the fact that they are permitted to enforce all these charges based on what they deemed to be 'commercial arrangements'," it added.

According to Alvin, the charges are related to the services at the port terminals and are not connected to the freight charges which shippers pay directly to shipping lines or non-vessel operating common carrier operators.

"When Port Klang adjusted its container port charges in 2001, the actual container tariff of the port operator charges the shipping lines RM230 for a 20ft container (twenty-foot equivalent units or TEU), but the shipping lines in turn charge the shipper/consignee RM335 under the name of 'Terminal Handling Charges'. They explained that the difference of RM105 is to cover respositioning of empty containers after un-stuffing and cleaning of containers," said the memorandum.

"Based on our investigation, the repositioning cost is paid for by the shippers/consignees who are paying the local hauliers to undertake the haulage job," the memorandum specified.

The memorandum said shipping lines have also enforced the collection of "container deposits" of RM300 to RM1,000 per container and would deduct any charges incurred for washing and repairing of those containers.

Other grievences include a RM30 charge for "Electronic Data Interchange" on shippers and consignees for their mandatory submission of the shipping manifest, which the memorandum said was the shipping lines' responsibility to do so under the requirements of the Customs Act 1967.

Furthermore, it said the "Container Seal" charge was increased from RM10 to RM15 per unit when the norminal market cost is just RM1.20 per seal while depot gate charges, which are currently set at RM5 per container, are expected to be increased to RM30 per box soon.

The memorandum also stated that some shipping lines have recently introduced a new charge, "Container Yard Shifting", with a RM150 fee per container, which is "highly dubious" as the shipping lines are not involved in any container handling and movement at the terminal.

It said another new dubious charge is the "Container Maintenance" charge of RM30 per TEU that is being unfairly charged under the "Container Deposits" scheme currently being collected by shipping lines, in which there is no explanation and justification for this charge.

"About five million TEUs go through Port Klang every year, of which about 2.5 million TEUs are import containers.

"One such frivolous charge alone like the 'Container Shifting Charge' of RM150 per box, if left unregulated, will cost our domestic industries about RM375 million annually and the overall cost to our domestic industry is huge and it must be regulated before it gets out of control," the memorandum stressed.