A long queue of vessels has formed at the Chattogram port’s outer anchorage, with berthing delayed by up to nine days, for container yards being acutely congested and operational disruptions resulting from the quota reform movement last week.
At least 13 container vessels were waiting to berth as of the afternoon today as others were held up at jetties for being unable to unload imports due to space constraints at the yards.
Delivery of imports from the yards resumed on the evening of July 23 after almost five days of countrywide unrest and curfew, but the pace was slow as the roads were choked with trucks entering to receive containers.
There were 35,421 TEUs (twenty feet equivalent units) of full container load (FCL) shipments, meaning containers entirely occupied by a single shipper’s goods, at the import yards till today morning.
This is over 88 percent of the yards’ capacity to store 40,368 TEUs.
Such space constraints are now forcing vessels to remain at the jetties for anywhere from three to five days whereas usually a vessel can leave within 48 hours on discharging imports and taking exports on board.
And this has led to the long queue of incoming vessels.
