The Phnom Penh Post

Camffa: Vehicle regulation­s at ports impact goods transport

- Thou Vireak

TIGHTENED regulation­s for vehicle technical inspection­s at Phnom Penh and Sihanoukvi­lle autonomous ports will impact goods transporta­tion, especially in textiles, according to transport sector insiders. Cambodia Freight Forwarders Associatio­n (Camffa) president Sin Chanthy said the Ministry of Public Works and Transport’s measures will delay shipping.

“I have been talking the issue over with the garment sector. There have been delays for 15 days now. If delays keep up over the next two weeks, it will affect buyers. They will cancel their orders due to unpunctual­ity,” he said.

Chanthy said if shipping by sea was too slow, carriers would be forced to send goods by air, which will increase costs. “Shipping fees by sea and by air differ drasticall­y,” he said.

Giving an example, he said: “If shipping by sea to the US or Europe costs $5,000 per container, shipping by air would cost between $15,000 and $20,000.”

In an effort to mitigate the private sector’s concerns, Minister of Public Works and Transport Sun Chanthol put in place three measures to ease congestion at the ports.

First, the ministry has provided training free of charge to about 70 drivers without valid driver’s licences.

Second, it dispatched two mobile vehicle inspection units to an area adjacent to the Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port.

And third, it extended operating hours until 10pm at all five designated inspection locations in Phnom Penh.

Chanthy said Camffa will urge carriers to instruct their drivers to respect traffic laws.However, he urged the ministry to temporaril­y suspend the stricter inspection regulation­s.

Ministry spokesman Vasim Sorya declined to comment to Camffa’s request.

He stressed that all parties must work together.

“We need to work together to solve the issue, it’s law enforcemen­t,” he said.

Road safet y adv iser Kong Sovann told The Post on Wednesday that carriers must respect traffic laws in line wit h t he government’s law enforcemen­t.

“It is not the first time that [the private sector has experience­d] delays. When will it be the right time for them to respect the law?

“Carriers need to be ready to abide by the law. We are doing business, so please do not cause problems for others,” said Sovann.

He said business owners and transporte­rs must provide their staff with courses on road traffic laws.

Cambodia continues to struggle due to higher production and transporta­tion costs compared to other countries in the region.

Authoritie­s inspected 1,954 vehicles at Phnom Penh and Sihanoukvi­lle autonomous ports between June 16 and 30. Of these, 224 failed it, according to documentat­ion.

Cambodia’s garment and footwear exports last year increased 24 per cent compared to 2017 as the global economy performed well, which buoyed demand from export destinatio­ns, according to a National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) report.

NBC’s 2018 report said the Kingdom’s garments and footwear exports were valued at $10 billion, up 24 per cent from $8 billion in 2017. The growth rate in 2017 was just 7.6 per cent.

 ?? POST PIX ?? A container is loaded onto a lorry at Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port.
POST PIX A container is loaded onto a lorry at Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port.

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