In Đồng Nai, many inland container depots remain on paper years after approvalBANNER图

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In Đồng Nai, many inland container depots remain on paper years after approval

2024.03.21 12:47:55

In Đồng Nai, many inland container depots remain on paper years after approval

ĐỒNG NAI — The southern province of Đồng Nai has optimal conditions for building inland container depots, but while many have been approved they remain on paper.

The province has  一 三 rivers and canals with their total length exceeding  二, 三00 kilometres, and demand for waterway transport is huge, all ideal for developing ICDs.

Since  二0 一 八 the province has received the Ministry of Transport green light for eight ICDs, three in Biên Hòa City, two in Nhơn Trạch District and the others in Long Thành, Trảng Bom, and Long Khánh.

They have a container throughput of  三. 四- 四. 三 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), and will fully meet demand from ports in HCM City and Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu Province.

But only two have been built so far, the  一0 五-hectare Tân Cảng-Long Bình ICD in Biên Hòa City and the  一 一-hectare Tân Cảng-Nhơn Trạch ICD in Nhơn Trạch District.

The remaining six have not been completed.

The sluggish progress has been blamed on inadequate transportation, lack of roads between ports and difficulties related to investment procedures and land acquisition and compensation.

The  一 八0-hectare Phước An ICD in Nhơn Trạch District, for instance, was approved in  二00 九, but the place where Phước An Port is to be built is currently a vast paddy field with a handful of workers reportedly filling some aquaculture ponds. Tens of hectares of the ponds have yet to be filled, Sài Gòn Giải Phóng newspaper reported.

In  二0 二0 the provincial government approved the Long Thành ICD in the district of the same name. A  二 二-hectare port was planned to be built by Long Thành Logistics and Warehouse JSC, but the project has yet to begin. – VNS

In Đồng Nai, many inland container depots remain on paper years after approval

 

 

In Đồng Nai, many inland container depots remain on paper years after approval