“Ro-Ro” is an acronym for Roll-on/roll-off,
specialised Carriers that transport wheeled cargo, mainly new automobiles. The ro-ro ship is different from lo-lo (lift
on-lift off) ship that uses a crane to load the cargo. The vehicles in the ship
are loaded and unloaded by means of built-in ramps. Normally these ramps are
made towards the stern (backside) of the ship.
These vessels are
slightly odd-shaped and in recent years, one can spot such vessels from Marina
beach. India has a lengthy coast
line. Our coast spans from the south
west Indian coastline along the Arabian sea from the coastline of the Gulf of
Kutch in its western most corner and stretches across the Gulf of Khambhat, and
through Mumbai, Konkan, Canara, Mangalore, Malabar, to Cape Comorin, into Southern India aong Coromandal Coast. Our Nation has a coastline of7,517 km (4,671
mi).
There are so many
ports in Gujarat ~ some are administered by Private. Gujarat Maritime Board, is the statutory body
of State Government of Gujarat, which responsible for management, control and
administration of 44 ports in Gujarat State. Port Pipavav, India’s first port
in the private sector, is a port on the West Coast of India for containers,
bulk and liquid cargo. Its lead promoter is APM Terminals, one of the largest
container terminal operators in the world.
APM Terminals recently
announced having hosted the maiden call
by leading RORO operator Höegh
Autoliners vessel – m.v. HOEGH ANTWERP at Pipavav Port. HOEGH ANTWERP berthed
at Pipavav Port in late January, 2016, to load Ford’s small and midsized cars,
being exported from its Sanand plant in Gujarat. Norway-based Höegh Autoliners is a
leading global provider of transportation and logistics services within the
RoRo segment. It has large fleet of vessels for Pure Car and Truck Carriers
(PCTCs) sailing in global trade systems.
In August 2015, APM
Terminals Pipavav commenced operations of its RoRo facility and successfully
berthed its first RoRo vessel m.v.Grand Dahlia at the port. Over 10,000 cars
have been shipped from Pipavav Port since the commencement of the RoRo
facility. The first shipment was of 1,380 new Ford Figo Aspire vehicles loaded on
to ‘Grand Dahlia’ vessel.
Photo
credit : marinelink.com
Hyundai Santro was
launched in Sept 1998 and was a runaway
success. Within a few months of its inception HMIL became the second largest
automobile manufacturer and the largest automobile exporter in India. Hyundai
has a manufacturing facility near Sriperumpudur in Tamilnadu, closer to the Capital
and Port at Chennai. Hyundai exports
cars to foreign countries and cars do roll out to other parts of India – it is
very usual to see so many specialised trucks waiting for loading cars.
The interesting
news is - Hyundai Motor Company is now using ships to move its cars across
domestic markets to save on costs and reduce carbon footprint.
As many as 800 cars
were loaded on to the M.V. IDM Symex, a roll-on-roll-off (RoRo) vessel, at the
Chennai Port recently and the vessel
sailed for Pipavav Port. Though Hyundai had been using Chennai Port for
exporting cars, this is the first time it is transporting its cargo through the
sea for domestic market. Trade sources said it takes normally three to four
days for the car manufacturer to move vehicles from the production centres near
Chennai to Gujarat region through trailers.
However, shipping
them is seen as eco-friendly and low-cost as the Centre had promised to provide
incentive of Rs.3,000 per car to those using coastal route. The Hindu reported that after flagging off
the maiden service, Chennai Port Trust officials are also talking to other OEMs
such as Nissan and Ford to start using the coast for transporting cargo. The Port Chairman is quoted as stating that
to encourage the OEMs to use the Port services, they announced a flat wharfage
rate of Rs.500 per small car and Rs.2,000 for big cars. Kamarajar Port, which recently overtook
Chennai Port in car exports, is also reportedly thinking in a similar direction.
The news report
adds that Vessel owner Symex Maritime Inc. has been granted permission by the
Directorate General of Shipping to carry out coastal run for five years. IDM
Symex will be used to transport cars manufactured mainly by Hyundai and other
manufacturers. To make it viable, Symex is in discussion with exporters and
importers to ship other commodities during the return trip to Chennai. Reportedly
an earlier attempt was not so successful.
It is now sated
that moving cars by coastal shipping would be 25 to 30 per cent cheaper when
compared to road. It is pollution free, as nearly 100 car trailers would be off
the road. According to government
estimates, a diversion of 5 per cent of cargo transportation to a waterborne
mode can result in an annual saving of Rs.2,000 crore and a reduction of 6 per cent in
harmful chemicals and pollutants.
Commodities carried
by coastal shipping include thermal coal, crude oil, iron ore and cement, and
this has not changed over the years. A web
search reveals that APM Terminals Pipavav received its first domestic Ro-Ro shipment of
800 Hyundai cars recently. The development follows Ministry of
Shipping's decision to relax cabotage regulations on special vessels … lot
happening out there, on the sea and at ports.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
20th Feb
2016.