The move to centralise trans-shipment activities is aimed at taking over a slice of the market currently dominated by Singapore, The Jakarta Post reported yesterday.
Transportation Ministry official Antonius Tonny Budiono said the government and units of state- owned port operator Pelabuhan Indonesia (Pelindo) are meeting to discuss plans to create an “integrated chain port”.
This involves consolidating the export of cargo from ports such as Bitung, in North Sulawesi, and Sorong, in West Papua, at Tanjung Priok, which now handles about half of the country's export shipments.
Antonius, who is director-general of sea transportation, said this will improve efficiency and make Tanjung Priok more attractive for shipping companies. "The transshipment sector has long been dominated by Singapore (but) if the commodities originate in our country, why can't we handle them?" he told The Jakarta Post.
His comments followed recent reports that Malaysia's Port Klang Authority (PKA) plans to build a new seaport, next to Port Klang, the country's largest port.
The RM200 billion (Sing$64 billion, Bt 2.25 billion) project, located on Pulau Carey, is critical if Malaysia wants to compete with Singapore for a larger share of the cargo trade, PKA chairman Kong Cho Ha had said.
Singapore, widely known as the world's busiest trans-shipment hub, accounts for almost a seventh of total global container transshipment.
Figures from the Maritime and Port Authority showed that Singapore's annual container throughput held steady last year at 30.9 million TEUs, or 20-ft equivalent units. By comparison, container traffic at Tanjung Priok over the same period was 5.4 million TEUs, up from 5.2 million TEUs in 2015. President Joko Widodo has made improving Indonesia's maritime infrastructure a key priority since he was elected in 2014.
Plans to jointly develop a deep- sea port in Patimban, West Java, were also brought up during a bilateral meeting between Joko and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Bogor this month.
Indonesia, however, has also suffered setbacks in the sector, most recently when a plan to develop an international port in North Sumatra was stalled.
Industry players and experts remain sceptical about the move, adding that the plan to consolidate cargo traffic at Tanjung Priok will be unlikely to have a negative impact on Singapore in the immediate future. This is because Singapore is still more strategically located than Tanjung Priok port.