Home
FacebookTwitterSearchMenu
  • Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • News
  • Features
  • Knowledge Library
  • Columns
  • Customs
  • Jobs
  • Directory
  • FX Rates
  • Categories
    • Categories
    • Africa
    • Air Freight
    • BEE
    • Border Beat
    • COVID-19
    • Crime
    • Customs
    • Domestic
    • Duty Calls
    • Economy
    • Employment
    • Energy/Fuel
    • Events
    • Freight & Trading Weekly
    • Imports and Exports
    • Infrastructure
    • International
    • Logistics
    • Other
    • People
    • Road/Rail Freight
    • Sea Freight
    • Skills & Training
    • Social Development
    • Sustainability
    • Technology
    • Trade/Investment
    • Webinars
  • Contact us
    • Contact us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send us news
    • Editorial Guidelines

Letters

23 Jul 2003 - by Staff reporter
0 Comments

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

Legal counsel sought over surcharge
Edcon has sought legal counsel on the surcharge imposed by the shipping lines on the importer. It is their strong contention that the surcharge is a unilateral departure from the terms of carriage contained in the relevant bill of lading and accordingly may be construed as a repudiation of the terms thereof. Any thoughts or comments on this would be welcome.
Martin Deall.

‘Let’s sue!’
I agree strongly that the surcharge is a hostile, unilateral move by shipping lines and reeks of horizontal collusion amongst ship-owners and operators. The daily cost of a major sea-going vessel (5000TEU) is approximately $16000 per day. If ships are running at 80% of capacity (discharging and taking on cargo at SA ports, for argument sake say 30% DBN & 20% CPT only) it means most lines are earning an extra windfall income of $200K per DBN & CPT voyage which in my book means they have 12.5 days to play with.
This is daylight robbery! Let’s sue them.
Pieter du Toit

‘CT can’t rest
on its laurels’
Fantastic to see that congestion at the Cape Town terminal is an historic event, that is until next year the same time. The seasonal fruit exports will continue to place pressure on the Cape Town terminal’s capacity unless major efforts are made in the off season to address the various capacity problems.
Are the NPA/SAPO as usual now going to sit on their bums and relax now the pressure is off,
Graeme Gill

‘Reefer rebuttal’
Reefer cargo is only 16% of our total annual throughput. So, everyone is entitled to their views.
Yacoob Hartley,
SA Port Operations.

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.
Subscribe to receive print copies of Freight News Features to your door.

FTW - 23 Jul 03

View PDF
ZA Trans prepares for massive growth
23 Jul 2003
ITAC revises drawback procedures
23 Jul 2003
Port of PE enhances management team
23 Jul 2003
BBCA and Manica join forces in Komatipoort
23 Jul 2003
New empowerment company pushes logistics focus
23 Jul 2003
Lack of manpower stymies policing of overloads
23 Jul 2003
Unions ‘content’ with NPA bill changes
23 Jul 2003
Spoornet sets August date for locomotive tenders
23 Jul 2003
Maritime BEE strategy focuses on job creation
23 Jul 2003
Viljoen distances himself from talk of SAA/Transnet divorce
23 Jul 2003
New name enters forwarding arena
23 Jul 2003
Misdeclarations on export entries attract hefty fines
23 Jul 2003
  • More

FeatureClick to view

West Africa 13 June 2025

Border Beat

Police clamp down on cross-border crime
Yesterday
Zim's anti-smuggling measures delay legitimate freight operations
06 Jun 2025
Cross-border payments remain a hurdle – Masondo
30 May 2025
More

Poll

Has South Africa's ports turned the corner?

Featured Jobs

New

Key Account Manager

Lee Botti & Associates
Johannesburg
18 Jun
New

Sea Import Controller - willing to be trained into Multimodal

Tiger Recruitment
East Rand
18 Jun
New

Pricing Specialist

CANEI
South Africa (Remote)
17 Jun
More Jobs
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Freight News RSS
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send us news
  • Contact us