Business Standard

Gadkari urges auto makers to opt for coastal shipping mode

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Union Minister Nitin Gadkari ( pictured) on Saturday flagged off export of Ashok Leyland trucks by coastal route to Bangladesh, and appealed to automobile manufactur­ers to opt for coastal shipping mode to transport vehicles.

Transporta­tion by road was costly and would pollute the environmen­t the Union Minister for Shipping, Road Transport and Highways said.

“That is the reason that we have decided to use waterways and coastal transport. This is going to reduce the cost, save time and at the same time will be very good for environmen­t. I appeal to all automobile manufactur­ers to use waterways for transporti­ng their automobile­s,” he said over video conferenci­ng from Nagpur.

He flagged off auto major Ashok Leyland’s consignmen­t of 185 trucks transporte­d through the roll-on roll-off (RoRo) coastal movement from Chennai Port to Mongla Port in Bangladesh.

He recalled that India had signed a coastal shipping agreement with Bangladesh during Prime Minister Narenda Modi’s 2015 visit there.

RoRo service was already happening between Chennai and Kochi and Kochi to Kandla and “this is a great example which is going to inspire and motivate all automobile manufactur­ers,” Gadkari added.

Minister for State for Shipping and Road Transport, Pon Radhakrish­nan said export of trucks by Ashok Leyland by sea route to Bangladesh would reduce the time by about 15-20 days as it takes only five days to reach the destinatio­n by sea.

The benefits include avoiding pollution and possible accidents, the Minister, present at the Chennai Port, added.

Ashok Leyland Managing Director Vinod K Dasari said the company had been exporting trucks to Bangladesh for 40 years using the road route and added that various issues, including congestion at the border and delay in crossing it had prompted them to think of an alternativ­e following which the government suggested the sea route.

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