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Murray News

China-controlled TCP plans to invest R$370m by 2023

Investments will be directed to expansion of areas for refrigerated cargo, purchase of cranes

06/21/2022


Terminal de Contêineres de Paranaguá (TCP), controlled by China Merchants Port, will start an investment plan of nearly R$370 million, which will be injected by the end of 2023. The goal is to increase capacity, both for storage and cargo handling.

Part of the funds will be used to purchase 11 RTG cranes, which are used to move containers. The investment was already part of the obligations of the concession, but the decision to acquire them at this time was due to the tax exemption window opened with the extension of Reporto, a tax regime that suspends the collection of federal taxes on imports of equipment in the industry, until the end of 2023.

The company’s goal is to expand its cargo-handling capacity by 15%.

The investment plan also includes a 43% expansion of the area destined for reefer containers, which will reach 5,178 sockets. One of TCP’s main cargoes is frozen meats – in 2021 the terminal accounted for 35.4% of Brazil’s chicken exports.

The container yard will also be expanded, by 20,000 square meters. This will be possible through the optimization of the terminal’s structures, which currently occupy 480,000 square meters.

The need for expansion emerged, in part, from the logistical chaos generated by the pandemic. In late 2019, just before the health crisis, TCP completed investments that expanded its area by 150,000 square meters. At the time, the expansion was seen as being enough to meet the demand of the next decades, said Thomas Lima, the company’s chief commercial and institutional officer. “With the pandemic, we had our capacity taken right away. All the parameters changed,” he said.

During the Covid-19 crisis, global logistics chains went through complete disorganization amid port closures, interruptions in production lines and delays in clearance. The effects seen since 2020 include clogged ports, container shortages and crammed warehouses.

In addition to the pressure generated by the pandemic, cargo handling is up. The volume of full containers handled by TCP grew 5.9% in 2021 compared with the previous year. In the first quarter of this year, it rose again – by 2.3%.

In the executive’s view, the perspectives are positive. “The Port of Paranaguá is very focused on agribusiness, which is a growing industry, despite the country’s GDP. The world is consuming more meat, and this tends to boost cargo-handling operations.”

Mr. Lima acknowledges that the pandemic still impacts operations. Recent lockdown measures in China have reduced the number of empty reefer containers coming into the country. This could create a bottleneck for meat exports, which need the equipment. “Exporters have their warehouses full because slaughtering has not stopped,” he said.

The executive considers that it is complex to foresee when the situation will be normalized. However, for him, the trade flow between Asia and Brazil is expected to normalize at the end of this year if China refrains from imposing new Covid lockdown measures.

¨*By Taís Hirata — São Paulo

Source: Valor International

https://valorinternational.globo.com/
21 de June de 2022/by Gelcy Bueno
Tags: China, investments, TCP plans
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