Brighter days ahead for Indo-Bangla river trade
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If you are actually on the Padma or Meghna rivers for a cruise or are going to the country's southern part, you will by no means miss a sporadic occurrence of several slow-moving small and large vessels alongside their sudden blasts of horns.
Most are engaged in transporting cargo in one area of the country to some other. But sure to be among them are some going beyond the border ferrying goods between Bangladesh and India.
And the frequency of their trips between your two neighbouring nations is increasing gradually; so is the level of cargo being hauled.
Plaudits should be given to the increased utilization of the 4,000 to 6,000 kilometres of waterways by businesses to move their import cargoes which has opened up opportunities for local cargo vessel operators.
Cargo transport through inland waterways between Bangladesh and India has just practically doubled to 27.80 lakh tonnes in fiscal 2019-20 from 14.37 lakh tonnes ten years ago, showed data from Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Authority (BIWTA).
Expansion of cement production to feed the rising number of public and private construction projects was helping the cargo transport through waterways, said vessel operators and BIWTA officials.
This is being facilitated by a Protocol on Inland Water Transit & Trade between Bangladesh and India as fly ash, one of the key ingredients of cement, was mainly imported through waterways from the neighbouring country.
And opportunities for more freight transport business are arising.
This is caused by increasing bilateral trade between the two neighbours, opening of new river routes and prospects of an increase in the shipment of goods by India under transit arrangements in the times to come, said operators.
"We see a very good prospect for business," said Syed Bashir Ahmed, managing director of Winship Logistics, one of the leading cargo vessel operators between India and Bangladesh's inland waterways.
More than 300 vessels are powered by inland waterways monthly between your two nations, annually producing around Tk 300 crore in earnings as freight charge for operators, sector insiders said.
Even one . 5 decades ago Indian vessels dominated the protocol routes, said cargo vessel owners.
Local operators slowly but surely entered and made gains available share. Today, local operators grab 99 % share of the cargo freight market, according to the BIWTA data.
The amount of trips of local vessels increased after 2005 and the frequency went up in the next years as demand for fly ash to produce more cement rose, said Ahmed.
In 2019-20, fly ash accounted for 98 % of the full total cargo transported on the waterways mainly between Narayanganj and Kolkata. Steel products, stone chips and containers made up the others. Although amount of transit cargo increased in recent years, it still accounts for an insignificant portion.
Only 13,000 tonnes of transit cargo were transported through inland waterways last fiscal year. The amount was 7,300 tonnes in fiscal 2010-11, according to BIWTA data.
Transit and transshipment increase and local logistics companies will reap its benefits, said Ahmed.
"Our home based business will expand. There isn't enough vessels in India. Our vessels will be utilized," he said, expecting the quantity of cargo transport over waterways to touch one crore tonnes within the next five years.
Business prospects look good, subject to maintenance of navigability of the rivers, said K Saiful Alam Miru, proprietor of Nexus Corporation.
"One of the shortcomings is that this is one-way traffic. We can not take anything from here as export," said Miru, also managing partner of the Gazaria Builders and Engineers.
"It could be economical if we're able to transport cargoes both ways. Scope to transport assorted cargoes will enable us to help make the business viable," he said.
The two organizations together have a fleet of 50 vessels.
"We want to ship cement to India. There is a good market for local cement in Northeast India. We are able to have a higher quantity at a cheaper rate there," said Ahmed.
"We are also trying to ship garment items through containers," he added.
Indian exporters of yarn, automobiles and parts are prepared to ship their export through waterways, he said.
"We can do this if the National Board of Revenue allows us and creates the facility," he said, urging the NBR to permit movement of more goods through waterways to reduce business costs and facilitate flourishing of the sector.
Trade between Bangladesh and India stands at around $9.21 billion with the scales heavily tilted towards India as Bangladesh's export amounts to around $1 billion.
Truckers and cargo vehicle operators transport a large part of the import-export goods. Transport through waterways increase revenue generation if the authority allows more products to pass over the rivers rather than roads, said Nazmul Hossain Hamdu, vice president of Bangladesh Cargo Vessel Owners' Association.
This will reduce the pressure on roads, he said. Cost of freight will also reduce largely for usage of waterways, said operators.
Two routes -- Daudkandi-Sonamura and Rajshahi-Godagari-Dhulian, India -- were added as protocol routes in December this past year, said BIWTA Director (traffic) Mohammad Rafiqul Islam.
"Prospects of water transport between Bangladesh and India are bright."
Source: https://www.thedailystar.net
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