The port of Mombasa has so far
recorded container traffic of 1.4 million twenty-foot equivalent units
(TEUs) in 2019, the best performance ever, surpassing a target of 1.35
million TEUs that had been set at the beginning of the year.
Daniel
Manduku, managing director of Kenya Ports Authority (KPA), said the 1.4
million TEUs represent a growth of 7.3 per cent from last year's 1.304
million TEUs.
Mr Manduku said that the performance was boosted by unprecedented growth in both transit and trans-shipment business.
He
said that between January and November 2019, the port has handled a
total of 31.479 million tons of cargo compared to 28.550 million tons
handled over the same period in 2018, indicating that the port will
attain over 34 million tons by the close of the year.
NAIROBI TERMINAL
Mr
Manduku added that cargo throughput at the Inland Container Terminal in
Nairobi grew by 61.1 per cent, from 257,972 TEUs as of December 2018 to
415,650 TEUs as at December 28, 2019.
This performance, he said, is
attributable to an increased number of Standard Gauge Railway daily
cargo trains between Mombasa and Nairobi where an average of 10 trains
leave daily for the Inland Container Terminal in Nairobi.
In
2019, the ship waiting time also reduced from 0.47 days in 2018 to 0.27
days currently, while ship turnaround time at present is at 3.4 days
for all vessels.
Kenya's
largest port of Mombasa handles cargo for the eastern and central
African regions, which include Uganda, northern Tanzania, South Sudan,
Rwanda, Burundi and eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
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