Sabtu, 08 Oktober 2011
Govt eyes more cruise ship visits to RI
Rabu, 09 Februari 2011
Rotterdam mayor in Jakarta to help
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| (Photo: RNW/Michel Maas) |
The Mayor of Rotterdam, Ahmed Aboutaleb, is visiting the Indonesian capital Jakarta. The two cities have signed a cooperation agreement for water management, but can Rotterdam's good intentions overcome the enormous problems facing the Indonesian port?
Senin, 24 Januari 2011
Port operators say RI’s harbors need dredging
Rabu, 19 Januari 2011
Nine boats drifted at Tanjung Priok Port due to extreme weather
Rabu, 06 Oktober 2010
Digging a memory of a sinking fishing center
Jumat, 30 Juli 2010
Pelindo to Pump Additional $77m Into Tanjung Priok as Upgrade Steams Ahead
Jumat, 30 April 2010
Govt license sought for Cilamaya port
Yuli Tri Suwarni, The Jakarta Post, Bandung | Fri, 04/30/2010 10:11 AM
The West Java provincial administration has called on the central government to speed up the issuance of the principal license for the development of Cilamaya port in Karawang.
The port, when completed, is expected to be able to ease Jakarta’s Tanjung Priok port’s cargo load by about 14 percent.
The head of the West Java Development Planning Agency, Denny Juanda, said the province had not yet received the written license from the central government. “What we have so far is just a verbal assurance and statements in media,” he said on Thursday.
He added the Cilamaya port would mean efficiency for businesses in term of expenses and timing of their product shipment. This in turn will improve their competitiveness, he said.
West Java industries and factories, according to Denny, constituted 6 million twenty-foot equivalent (TEU) a day or some 45 percent of Tanjung Priok’s cargo.
Stagnation at Tanjung Priok, he said, had caused financial losses to the industry due to delays of up to five days in shipping as ships had to queue before being able to leave the port.
He said the compensation the West Java provincial administration had to bear from the delay reached up to Rp 10 billion in 2005 and is predicted to increase to Rp 18.81 billion this year.
“We won’t take the entire industry from Tanjung Priok to Cimalaya. But at least it can serve as the main feeder for the port,” Denny said.
He added that state-run port operator company PT Pelindo II had expressed commitment to manage Cilamaya as a hub-port to reduce the long queue at Tanjung Priok.
A European community consortium, PT Eurocorr Indonesia, worked with Dutch DETEC NV to finish the feasibility study in 2008 and planned to develop Cilamaya as a European-standard port.
JICA (Japan for International Cooperation Agency), he added, had also been funding a master plan study on the development of Cilamaya conducted by the Transportation Ministry scheduled to be completed by July this year.
Meanwhile, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s West Java chapter asked that industries had access to an export-import port zone that was void of social problems and traffic congestion.
Chairman Agung Suryamal Sutisno said the port would be important to guarantee the security and speed of the exports to get to the buyers’ hands abroad in time.
He added that Tanjung Priok was no longer feasible as West Java’s main export-import gate as containers first had to travel Jakarta’s city toll roads that were plagued by traffic jams.
The Cilamaya feasibility study shows that it is on average a 15-hour turn-around to Tanjung Priok from Bandung. While to Cimalaya it is only a 10-hour turn-around.
The difference is considered Cilamaya’s competitive advantage.
Rabu, 21 April 2010
Violence at Batam Port Targets Foreigners
Reports are emerging of violence directed against Indian nationals employed by PT Drydock World Graha in Batam, Riau Islands province.
State news agency Antara is reporting that 41 Indian workers employed by the company were escorted by 400 police, including the armed Mobile Brigade (Brimob), from the company premises after they were attacked by local workers.
At least four of the workers were injured and about 20 vehicles set alight, Antara reported. The offices have also been trashed.
One worker was quoted by Antara as alleging that the unrest was triggered after an Indian national said “Indonesian people were stupid.”
“This is national pride, so we are all angry,” the local, identified as Baim, said.
About 10,000 Indonesians were observed crowding the company premises singing “Great Indonesia” and other patriotic songs, Antara reported.
The National Maritime Institute (Namarin) said the recent violence at Tanjung Priok in North Jakarta was likely to raise shipping insurance costs, and its “international reputation as an export and import gate will plummet.”
The Joint War Committee, a London organization that analyzes shipping risks, had listed maritime regions in Indonesia as “war risk zones” that might pose dangers to domestic or international ships.

Indonesian dock workers set fire to three buildings and torched or vandalized more than 20 vehicles on Thursday after an argument with Indian manager, police said. (Reuters Photo)
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Kamis, 15 April 2010
Tanjung Priok Clashes Bad for Image, Business of Indonesia's Ports
Jakarta Globe, April 16, 2010
Wednesday’s rioting and bloodshed at Tanjung Priok, sparked by an apparent misunderstanding over the fate of the historic tomb of an 18th-century religious leader, highlights the volatile fault lines of religion and poverty that have given the country a reputation for instability and incipient chaos.
The televised mayhem in Jakarta’s main port area left government officials and business leaders scrambling to explain what happened, while acknowledging that the area itself is fraught with the potential for further unrest. While the immediate economic impact is limited, the melee added to the port’s already dodgy reputation among international insurers.
Coordinating Minister for the Economy Hatta Rajasa said on Wednesday that he hoped the clashes, which claimed the lives of three public order officers and injured more than a hundred, would have no negative repercussions for the economy, according to the Antara news agency. “I hope there will be a settlement soon,” Hatta said.
Noting that Tanjung Priok’s Koja Container Terminal is the main gateway for goods in and out of the country, Hatta urged negotiations to ease the tensions in the neighborhood over the tomb and clarify the intentions — still unclear — that the North Jakarta government has for it.
In another report, however, the National Maritime Institute (Namarin) responded to the violence by raising the risk assessment for doing business in Tanjung Priok Port, a move likely to raise shipping insurance costs, according to Antara.
“The violent clash in Koja [North Jakarta] on Wednesday ... raised the level even higher. In the long run, [Tanjung] Priok Port’s international reputation as an export and import gate will plummet,” Namarin director Siswanto Rusdi said in Jakarta on Thursday, Antara reported.
Siswanto said that in a meeting last November, the Joint War Committee, a London organization that analyzes shipping risks, had listed maritime regions in Indonesia as “war risk zones” that might pose dangers to domestic or international ships.
Siswanto said Tanjung Priok Port had a number of potentially volatile issues, including a land dispute over the Koja Container Terminal that involves hundreds of families.
“The potential is there” for more trouble and social conflict, he said. “The rule of law is uncertain in [Tanjung] Priok.”
Johnson W Sutjipto, chairman of the Indonesian National Shipowners Association (INSA), said the fighting only halted port operations for a few hours and he hoped there would no lasting fallout. “There was not much of a delay because the Transportation Ministry took immediate steps to respond,” Johnson told the Jakarta Globe.
He said the case would affect a government plan to ask the JWC to cancel its risk alert for Indonesian ports, including Tanjung Priok.
Johnson said ports in Belawan, Balikpapan and Natuna were also categorized as risky because of the potential for social unrest.
Wednesday’s clashes will automatically postpone plans to propose dropping the risk level for all the nation’s ports. As a result of the JWC assessment, Johnson said, shipowners faced higher insurance rates.
Namarin’s Siswanto told Antara that a number of studies had concluded over the years that Tanjung Priok was unfit as a port largely because of the social tensions and complex landholding issues. “The problem is, the government and PT Pelindo II [the port operator] insist on developing Tanjung Priok, leading to efforts to expand the area and acquire more land, which raises the potential of precipitating social conflict.”
Siswanto predicted that as Tanjung Priok’s competitiveness decreased, potential investors would be reluctant to transport their goods through the port.
“I heard indications that foreign investors in TPK [the Koja Container Terminal], like Hutchison Whampoa, have taken steps to leave Tanjung Priok,” he said.
The immediate problem, said Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa, chief researcher at the state-run Danareksa Research Institute, is for the government to calm the community.
“If the government continues with repressive actions, it will send a bad signal. Authorities opted for mediation, which is wise,” Purbaya said.
The stock market did not fall after the fighting, Purbaya noted. “Investors think this is only a local incident. This is not something like what is happening in Thailand.”
JG, Antara
Rabu, 31 Maret 2010
Many Import Documents are Forgeries
Tempo Interactive, Wednesday, 31 March, 2010 | 12:41 WIB
TEMPO Interactive, Jakarta: The Directorate General of Customs and Excise have found numerous violations using fictitious Certificates of Origin following the free trade agreement. As of early this year, at least 53 cases with false certificates of origin have been found in Tanjung Perak Harbor, Surabaya and Belawan Harbor, Medan.
Customs and Excise director-general, Thomas Sugijata, said that the findings consisted of 32 cases in Tanjung Perak and 21 cases in Belawan. They were exposed following checks carried early this year on goods unloaded in the two harbors.
The modus is allegedly to claim imported goods originating from countries which have not established a free trade agreement to come from those which have signed the pact. The aim is not having to pay tariffs.
According to Thomas, it is possible that similar cases occurred in other major harbors. “We have instructed that an investigation be carried as of early this year, especially on goods getting zero percent tariffs,” he said at a press conference in the headquarters of the Directorat General of Custom and Excise yesterday.
He was not able to provide information on the origin of the goods using the fake certificates, but he revealed that most of them used Chinese certificates of origin.
Indonesia has signed a free trade agreement with ASEAN countries as well as with China, Korea and Japan. “The tariff facilities will not be given to those who are not eligible. We will not allow this happen,” he said.
The Minister of Manpower and Transmigration, Muhaimin Iskandar, said that until now, there has been no significant impact following the launching of the free trade agreement.
“The Manpower Office chief has been instructed to keep on monitoring developments as a result of the China-ASEAN free trade agreement,” said Muhaimin in Bandung yesterday.
The Minister of Trade Mari Elka Pangestu said that Indonesia does not plant to sign a new free trade agreement in the near future. “More time is neededfor socialization,” said Mari in a separate occasion last week.
Mari explained that the socialization process carried out is about the positive side of free trade agreement. “We must also provide information about concerns (on the negative impacts), “she said.
Indonesia is still exploring the possibility of having a free trade agreement with Australia, New Zealand and Europe, which are grouped under the Europe Free Trade Association. Specifically on free trade between Indonesia, Australia and New Zealand, the government has just completed a feasibility study.
Even though there has been no agreement yet, according to Mari, the process leading to free trade with the three countries is being prepared. “At this stage, we have involved the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry,” said Mari.
AGOENG WIJAYA | ALWAN RIDHA RAMDANI | EKA UTAMI APRILIA



