Volumes soften at Ports of Auckland
05 February 2008
MEDIA RELEASE
For immediate
release
Volumes soften at Ports of Auckland
Ports of Auckland is seeing signs of the economic slowdown with January container volumes down year-on-year.
Following a record high in December,
container volumes for the month of January were 46,673, down
4.7% on the same month last year. As measured by the
industry standard TEU (20-foot equivalent unit), volumes
were 63,571, down 4.2%.
International cruise ship calls
remained strong with 15 in January and another 24 scheduled
for February, including the Queen Mary 2 – two more calls
than for the same period last year.
Managing Director Jens Madsen said the company remained concerned about the economic outlook.
“Over the last few months, there have been reports of significant reductions in container volumes through major world ports such as Singapore and Long Beach. New Zealand seems to have remained fairly insulated from the impacts until now.”
“As flagged last month, we are gearing the business to cope with what appear to be very challenging times ahead,” Mr Madsen said.
ENDS
The
Ports of Auckland is New Zealand’s largest container port
by volume, handling around 840,000 TEU (20ft-equivalent
units), more than 1,700 ship calls and 3.6 million tonnes of
break-bulk (non-containerised) cargo per annum. It is New
Zealand’s major import port and a key partner to export
industries. The Ports of Auckland is 100%-owned by Auckland
Regional Holdings.
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