HCM City (VNA) - A detailed plan on logistics development,especially on transport connectivity, is needed to set goals for industrialproduction, agriculture and imports-exports, experts have urged.
Ho Xuan Lam, Deputy Director of the HCM City Investment and Trade PromotionCentre (ITPC), said at a recent seminar on “Improving the Efficiency ofLogistics Services in Vietnam” held in Ho Chi Minh City, that the city had anadvanced system of seaports and warehouses and played a “leading role in cargotransport in the southeastern region due to its prime geographic location”.
In 2017, the logistics sector of the city reached 91.541 trillion VND (4.03billion USD), accounting for 8.6 percent of the Gross Regional Domestic Product(GRDP) and 14.8 percent of the service sector, according to officialstatistics.
Logistics is the second most important industry in the nine key services of thecity with growth of 10.84 percent over 2016.
However, the development of logistics in the city and neighbouring provincesface obstacles due to overloaded infrastructure, mostly roads and ports.
Pham Thi Thuy Van, deputy marketing director of the Sai Gon NewportCorporation, said that most logistics facilities were located in areas around CatLai, Thu Duc, Song Than, Linh Trung and neighbouring areas of Dong Nai Bridge.
HCM City in particular has 11 container ports covering a total area of 310 hain addition to 7,000 sqm of piers.
The concentration of all the logistics facilities has created a pressure on thetraffic system, which would incur costs. For instance, the average storage timeof imports has also increased due to slow release of goods.
In addition, Van said a number of bridges in HCM City had low clearancelevels, causing difficulties for transport by waterway and increasingtransport costs for businesses.
Dao Trong Khoa, vice president of the Vietnam Association of LogisticsService Enterprises (VLA), said factors contributing to the high cost of logistics,included costs for transporting goods by road and surcharges at seaports andlimits on seaport infrastructure, among others.
To reduce logistics costs, transport costs must be reduced first as transportaccounts for 50 percent of logistics costs, according to Khoa.
Van of the Sai Gon Newport Corporation recommended that HCM City and otherlocalities in the key southern economic zones and the Mekong Delta develop anaction plan to build centralised logistics centres and distribution warehouses.
The construction of centralised distribution facilities would facilitate theservice of a broader market and the development of integrated infrastructure.
To do that, the localities should have early planning studies detailing cargovolumes, cargo flows, and construction of roads and railways to ease trafficcongestion.
Pham Son, head of the logistics division of Ben Nghe Port Co., Ltd, said it wasnecessary to improve the capacity of infrastructure connectivity. In addition,logistics companies in Vietnam need to develop markets and build brand names.
Agencies need to apply more e-customs clearance, infrastructure andinformation-sharing among specialised agencies to simplify administrativeprocedures.
Efficient transport and logistics play a significant role in increasingproductivity, according to experts.
According to a 2016 report by VLA, the logistics industry accounts for 20 to 25percent of national GDP and is expected to grow at a rate of around 12 per centannually in the near future.-VNA