Indian exporters are facing mounting cost pressures as feeder vessel rates to Colombo rise sharply, disrupting one of the country’s key transshipment routes. The surge in charges is adding fresh strain to outbound trade flows, particularly for cargo that depends on Colombo as a major gateway for connections to global mainline shipping services.
Colombo remains a crucial hub for Indian containerized exports, especially from southern and western ports, where feeder services transfer cargo to long-haul vessels bound for Europe, North America, and other international markets. Higher feeder rates are increasing total logistics costs for exporters already dealing with freight volatility, tighter vessel space, and uncertain transit schedules.
Industry stakeholders warn that sectors such as textiles, engineering goods, chemicals, and perishables may see reduced competitiveness if elevated feeder charges persist. Smaller exporters are expected to feel the impact more sharply, as transport costs form a larger share of their landed price.
Trade bodies are urging shipping lines and authorities to address capacity bottlenecks while accelerating direct mainline connectivity from Indian ports. The latest developments also renew calls for strengthening domestic transshipment hubs to reduce reliance on overseas gateways and improve long-term supply chain resilience.
