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Domestic Economy

Iranian Ports Register Growth in Throughput

During March 21-July 22, the total unloading volume stood at 25.89 million tons, registering a 12% year-on-year increase, while 43.49 million tons of goods were loaded to register a 3% growth compared with the corresponding period of last year

A total of 69.39 million tons of goods were loaded and unloaded in Iranian commercial ports during the first four months of the current Iranian year (March 21-July 22), registering a 6% rise compared with the similar period of last year, latest figures released by the Ports and Maritime Organization of Iran show.

The unloading volume stood at 25.89 million tons, registering a 12% year-on-year increase, of which 9.14 million tons were oil products and the remaining 16.75 million tons were non-oil goods, Mehr News Agency reported.

A total of 43.49 million tons of goods were loaded during the same period to register a 3% growth compared with the corresponding period of last year, of which 25.37 million tons were oil products and 18.12 million tons were non-oil.

Container throughput stood at 865,338 TEUs, indicating a 14% year-on-year rise.  

The 22 ports under study include Iran’s southern ports of Abadan, Imam Khomeini, Bushehr, Khorramshahr, Genaveh, Bandar Lengeh, Chavibdeh, Arvandkenar, Charak and Dayyer located on the shores of the Persian Gulf, Shahid Rajaee, Shahid Bahonar, Shahid Haqqani, Qeshm and Tiab at the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz, Jask and Chabahar on the coasts of the Sea of Oman and the northern ports of Fereydounkenar, Noshahr, Astara, Amirabad and Anzali on the Caspian Sea shoreline.

Iran’s 22 commercial ports handled a total of 152.91 million tons of goods (loading and unloading) during the last Iranian year (ended March 20), registering a 17% growth in throughput compared with the year before, according to the Resource Planning and Management Department of the Ports and Maritime Organization of Iran.

Container throughput stood at 2.1 million TEUs during the period, registering a 13.5% year-on-year increase.

Around 46.89 million tons of dry bulk cargo, 3.76 million tons of liquid bulk cargo and 21.83 million tons of general cargo were handled during the period, registering a 12.8%, 12.6% and 13.1% rise compared with the previous year respectively.

Shahid Rajaee Special Economic Zone, located in the southern Hormozgan Province, accounts for the highest share of all goods exported from and imported to Iran.

The economic zone, which has a loading/unloading capacity of 100 million tons per year, accounts for over half of Iran's trade and about two-thirds of total freight transit through the country.

The lion’s share of Iran's containers are handled at Shahid Rajaee Port Complex.

With 18 gantry cranes and 40 berths, Shahid Rajaee is the most advanced container port of Iran.  

Launched in 1985, the port has expanded every year. Today it is connected to 80 ports worldwide.

The significance of this port lies in its large capacity, including its location in the Persian Gulf, container terminal, fuel bunkering, access to 24 kilometers of railroads and round-the-clock truck transportation.

In terms of transit, again Shahid Rajaee Special Economic Zone tops the list of Iranian customs terminals.

According to PMO, a total of 20.14 million tons of essential goods were imported through seaports last year.

Also known as necessity or basic goods, essential goods are products consumers will buy, regardless of changes in income levels. 

Imam Khomeini in the southern Khuzestan Province with 12.59 million tons topped the list of ports of entry for essential goods. These goods included 7.71 million tons of corn, 2.95 million tons of wheat, 1.32 million tons of barley and 607,021 tons of sugar.

The largest portion of the country’s demand for livestock feed raw material and grains are imported through this port. Imam Khomeini is Iran’s second busiest port after Shahid Rajaee in Hormozgan Province.

The port boasts 40 wharfs, 140 kilometers of railroads within its premises and equipped with the latest loading and unloading facilities.

Shahid Rajaee Port came next with 2.61 million tons of essential goods imports, including 1.58 million tons of wheat, 400,919 tons of sugar, 340,459 tons of corn, 200,550 tons of barley and 93,942 tons of rice.

Third was Sistan-Baluchestan Province’s Chabahar Port with 2.04 million tons of imports, including 1.13 million tons of wheat, 396,230 tons of barley, 334,102 tons of corn, 148,806 tons of rice and 27,100 tons of sugar.

 

 

INSTC to Boost Share of Caspian Ports Shipping

The combined capacity of Iran’s five Caspian ports, namely Anzali, Noshahr, Fereydounkenar, Astara and Amirabad, is at 35 million tons, accounting for only about 13% of the total capacity of Iranian ports, according to Jalil Eslami, the deputy head of Ports and Maritime Organization of Iran.

“Poor export infrastructures and lack of adequate equipment are to blame for the low shipping traffic of northern Iranian ports and freight forwarding companies, as well as traders’ reluctance to use their services,” Ali Chagharvand, director of Plan Management, Planning and Monitoring Department of Iran Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture, wrote for Tasnim News Agency. 

"Traders and transportation companies do not avail themselves of the numerous advantages of Iran’s northern ports that are in recession. Economic players believe that they are uneconomical. This is while by removing obstacles, freight transportation and trade through northern ports can become a viable alternative to other transit routes and even southern ports,” he said. 

According to the official, in the fiscal 2020-21, a meager 5-6 tons of the overall capacity of northern ports were used, as demand for their services has declined in recent years.

"Nowshahr Port has considerable advantages, including its proximity to the capital city and major commercial and industrial centers, easy access to the consumer markets of Central Asia and Eastern Europe, access to the airport, availability of facilities for storage and movement of commercial goods, petroleum products and solid bulk, having exclusive warehouses and special facilities for export and transit, as well as direct connection through pipelines to Chalous oil reservoirs. However, due to many reasons, the port’s shipping traffic is even lower than that of Amirabad Port.”

 

 

INSTC Operationalization

The operationalization of the so-called International North-South Transport Corridor could give impetus to northern ports.

Iran’s state-owned Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Line has moved to extend its network by facilitating the transport of Russian goods to India via INSTC, a land-sea corridor passing through a dozen countries to bypass Western sanctions against Russia, Splash247.com reported.

The corridor has entered the operational phase after completing a trial phase in June when containers of wood laminate sheets departed from St. Petersburg toward Nhava Sheva Port in India.

The cargo arrived in India earlier this month after traveling from Astrakhan Port in southern Russia to the Iranian ports of Anzali on the Caspian Sea and Bandar Abbas on the Persian Gulf.

The establishment of INSTC, the multimodal network of ships, rail and roads for moving freight between Eastern Europe and South Asia, was first introduced in September 2000. Due to geopolitical obstacles, interest in the route waned over time, but it has been reintroduced following the conflict in Ukraine.

IRISL has assigned 300 containers to transport goods between Russia and India, and if the demand increases, the number of these containers will be increased.

 

 

IRISL Plans to Promote Caspian Shipping

New vessels will soon be joining IRISL to increase the capacity of shipping in the Caspian Sea, says the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines.

“Agreements have been signed between Khazar Sea Shipping Lines [a subsidiary of IRISL Group] and a domestic manufacturer for the production of two RO-RO ships in addition to two general cargo vessels, which are due to be delivered within two years,” Mohammad Reza Modarres-Khiabani, the CEO of IRISL Group, was quoted as saying by Mehr News Agency recently.

With these four new vessels, the capacity of Khazar Sea Shipping Lines will increase by 16%, he added.

Established in 1992, Khazar Sea Shipping Lines is one of the biggest providers of marine transportation services in the Caspian Sea.

KSSL recently announced that container transit shipping lines have been launched between ports in northern Iran and Russia’s Makhachkala Port.

It will from now on transport transit, refrigerated and general container consignments from ports in Iran’s northern provinces to the port in Makhachkala, previously known as Petrovskoye, IRNA reported.

Makhachkala is the only Russian port on the shores of Caspian Sea, the access routes to which are not severed in winter by frozen waters.

Transporting containers from Iran to Moscow via this port is 30% more efficient in terms of time and cost compared to the route passing through Azerbaijan Republic.

Makhachkala is the capital and largest city of the Republic of Dagestan in Russia and is located along the shore of the Caspian Sea. 

KSSL and the Trade Promotion Organization of Iran signed a memorandum of understanding on Oct. 13 to establish six regular shipping routes for the transport of freight between Iran’s northern ports in the Caspian Sea and those of Russia and Kazakhstan.

The signatories, Davoud Tafti, the CEO of Khazar Sea Shipping Lines, an IRISL subsidiary, and Alireza Peymanpak, the head of TPO, agreed to expand these marine transportation lines to eight by March 2022.

“Freight will be transported on a regular basis between the Iranian ports of Amirabad, Anzali and Noshahr, and Russia’s Makhachkala and Astrakhan, and Kazakhstan’s Aktau ports. Two other optional routes from Iran’s Astara and Fereydounkenar ports have been included in the MoU to carry cargo to the above-mentioned ports in Russia and Kazakhstan on demand,” Tafti was quoted as saying by ILNA. 

TPO, affiliated with the Ministry of Industries, Mining and Trade, has also agreed to compensate any possible financial loss on the part of Khazar Sea Shipping Lines.

The shipping line has the capacity to transport 200,000 tons of cargo per year while container loading and unloading capacity amounts to 6,000 TEUs per year. 

The company has 23 vessels under its name, 15 of which can carry containers.

Infrastructures are ready for commodity transit from Iran's southern ports to the north and through Caspian Sea, the CEO told Trend News Agency in an interview.

"We are interacting with southern ports, commodity owners and company branches in China, Russia, South Korea, Singapore and India for promoting cargo transportation through the International North-South Transport Corridor and Iran's East-West Transit Corridor to Eurasian countries," Tafti explained.

 

 

KSSL Registers a 162% Rise in Shipment

Transit of goods by Khazar Sea Shipping Lines increased by 162% in the fiscal 2021-22, thanks to the unwavering support lent by the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines. 

According to Tafti, KSSL operates weekly container shipping services on the China-Kazakhstan-Iran container route.

“Khazar Sea Shipping Lines has found new transit markets. For example, it carried 3,213 vehicles in 2021-22, registering a 346% growth compared with the year before. Container throughput reached 9,389 TEU (twenty-foot equivalent unit) last year, indicating a 63% growth. Bulk and general shipping also increased by 21% to reach 1.16 million tons,” he was quoted as saying by Mehr News Agency. 

Noting that the company had expanded its services to the Black Sea, the Sea of Azov, India and Pakistan, Tafti said, “Khazar Sea Shipping Lines now accounts for 32.5% of shipping market of the Caspian Sea [2.3% growth in its market share was registered in 2021-22] and the company’s operating income increased by 53% in 2021-22 compared with the year before.”