A consortium of
Mumbai-based JM Baxi Group and CMA CGM subsidiary CMA Terminals has emerged as
the highest bidder for a 30-year concession to privatise Nhava Sheva Port
(JNPT)’s oldest container terminal, JNPCT.
The bids were opened this morning 28 June, according to port
sources.
They also said the
winning consortium had offered a revenue share (royalty) of Rs4,520 ($57) per
teu for the landlord authority.
“[Qatar-backed]
QTerminals became the second-highest bidder with an offer of Rs4,235 a teu.”
A port official said, “With
a market-driven pricing system now being permitted for new terminal
concessions, the new concessionaires are expected to charge users between
Rs5,800 and Rs6,000 per teu.”
6 bidders reached final stage of the bidding
Six bidders, including
MSC’s Terminal Investment, DP World’s Hindustan Ports and APM Terminals,
reached the final stage of the bidding, which ended just a day after the Bombay
High
Court turned down an
appeal by Adani Group, challenging its disqualification from the tender
process.
The port had cited Adani’s coal terminal contract termination at
Visakhapatnam Port in 2020 as the reason for its exclusion.
“We find no merit in any
of the contentions urged on behalf of the petitioner,” the Bombay High Court
said, rejecting Adani’s appeal.
The privatisation is part of a
government programme to monetise stressed public port assets.
With prolonged
under-investment and rising intra-port competition following the entry of
private operators, JNPCT has suffered significant market share erosion as large
customers have shifted calls. Year-to-date volumes at the state-owned
terminal’s two berths were 440,000 teu, down 19% year on year.
And, as a standalone
facility, JNPCT lacks the global network leverage to attract major container
lines offering regular calls on major trades out of the country.
Nhava Sheva Port has
four other container terminals, operated by APM Terminals, DP World and PSA
International, and a project designed for 2.4m teu capacity a year is in the
works as part of PSA’s two-phase investment at the port, known as Bharat Mumbai
Container Terminals.