Viewpoint – Page 10

  • News

    Learning Curve

    2007-01-01T16:26:00Z

    It is interesting to note that an officer of Kenya Ports Authority has suggested that congestion problems in Dar es Salaam are worse than those prevalent in Mombasa, and that as a result privatisation may not be the right road for the Port of Mombasa to go down. He suggests ...

  • News

    Takes two to tango

    2006-12-01T18:27:00Z

    Promoting competition in port activities seems a simple enough concept for government to handle,but theory does not always go into practice easily.

  • News

    Foreign bodies

    2006-11-01T18:27:00Z

    Space to expand, government backing and support from terminal operators - sounds like any port authority''s dream. But Rotterdam has never been one for dreaming. Here''s a port that has always been one step ahead of the game. In the 1950s growing ship calls prompted the construction of Botlek and ...

  • News

    Independence Day

    2006-10-01T18:27:00Z

    International terminal operators, with their wide reach, high profile branding and bottomless pockets,have fast become synonymous with successful port operations, leaving public sector terminals to be viewed as the poor relations of the port world. And with capacity shortages making sour reading for shippers, these terminal factory lines can only ...

  • News

    Big spin-offs

    2006-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The thirst for ever larger containerships is seemingly never quenched. Last month, the gleaming Emma Maersk sashayed on to the market with its declared 11,000 teu capacity - and whispers of a ''real'' capacity of more than 13,000 teu.

  • News

    Expect the unexpected

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    As I walked around Limassol port last month and watched the port manager calmly overseeing thousands of evacuees using his port as a springboard for other destinations, I have to say I was impressed. This port on the south coast of Cyprus didn''t ask to be the channel for evacuees ...

  • News

    Question Time

    2006-06-01T00:00:00Z

    The UK Ports Policy Review Roadshow rolled into London on 25 May and was the focus of some serious attention as well as merriment by industry participants and analysts alike.

  • News

    Grasping the big issues

    2006-04-01T00:00:00Z

    This is the last Viewpoint I shall be writing. I''m returning to my old business of ships agency, and to my old firm, Inchcape Shipping Services after three terrific years editing PS.

  • Piraeus: everything on offer
    News

    Maritime Centres and Democracy

    2006-03-01T00:00:00Z

    In Belgium and Holland recently it was striking to see what a deep-routed culture of maritime tradition prevails. The history of maritime activity goes back centuries and as with any such region, this breeds much more than just the port and its core activities. In Benelux you will find the ...

  • Oslo: quiet, clean, green
    News

    Use this rich era of growth to clean up our act

    2006-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Economist Ben Hackett rings in the new year with some positive news. Despite predictions to the contrary, the global economy is in robust shape and will remain so, provided of course the ''almighty'' consumer (you and me) does not lose heart.

  • Dubai: Time will tell
    News

    Are we looking sexy?

    2005-12-01T00:00:00Z

    It''s beginning to look that way. So take your partners please.

  • The consensus of opinion is that the price D P World is offering to pay for P&O is a generous one
    News

    P&O Act 1 or 2?

    2005-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Will DPW''s bid for P& O prevail or is Temasek/PSA rewriting the script? Mike Mundy investigates.

  • The World, Dubai
    News

    What is going on?

    2005-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Ports are hot all of a sudden - that''s what. Dubai Ports World (DPW) are aiming to gobble up as much capacity around the world as they can lay their hands on, their almost indecent haste fuelled by deep pockets filled with petrodollars. At the end of October they were ...

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    News

    Bring back the Big Easy

    2005-10-01T00:00:00Z

    In the short life of this magazine we have had to report on three major calamities wrought upon us by Mother Nature: Typhoon Maemi flattened Busan''s container terminal; then the Boxing Day tsuname wiped out whole coastlines; and now Hurricane Katrina. Each one an Act of God.

  • P&Os NSICT: stands to lose around US$9m
    News

    You cannot be serious!

    2005-09-01T00:00:00Z

    You would think that after at least ten years of full-on port privatisation that countries wishing to attract new investors, and the investors themselves, would know how to get it right. Two recent events, however, suggest otherwise.

  • Leanne Taylor (left) with Liebherrs Monika Schedler
    News

    Let there be ports

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    TOC provides a wealth of ideas and material for a magazine like ours and the recent event in Antwerp was no exception. We catch those conference sessions we can and download the speakers'' papers from those presentations we can''t get to, to mull over later. We chat with people who ...

  • Lord Sterling: telling remarks
    News

    End of an era at P&O - so what next?

    2005-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Mid-2005 will, in years to come, probably be seen as a pivotal moment for P& O. The jury is out, however, on whether it will be seen in a positive or negative context.

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    News

    Sustainability versus Progress

    2005-05-01T00:00:00Z

    The Bengal tiger may be an endangered species but the Indian economy is certainly not. Investment bankers talk of it as the next Asian tiger - arguably it already is.

  • News

    Between the gate, the breakwater and beyond

    2005-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Our Close-Up this month is remarkable for two reasons: first Robin Middleton is an interesting character with an interesting job; more importantly, his job description offers a possible template for other coastal states to follow.

  • News

    Hard Choices

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Life is about making choices - some harder than others. And choices have consequences. But once a course has been chosen - right or wrong - then what is done is done and anyway it''s usually impossible to reverse back the way you''ve come.