THE PORTNET compensation agreement with the shipping lines has now been in place for over a month - And no claims yet, according to Ronnie Kingwill, g.m. operations.
This allows compensation if - as a result of poor Portnet management, or uncontrollable circumstances like wildcat strikes, as Kingwill put it - the harbour authorities can't work a ship within 16 hours of the agreed time.
At the same time ships have to stick to a six hour berthing window around the ETA (estimated time of arrival) originally posted with Portnet.
Labour productivity is being encouraged with an incentive scheme - where the current R350 bonus is being incorporated into salaries, and will be replaced by the new scheme.
The nitty-gritty on that policy document, said Kingwill, is still being worked on.
The success of the new scheme will give Portnet a 12-month window in which it can get all its ducks in a row for the next step.
This, Kingwill told FTW, will be an integration of Portnet's tariff review process with an individual agreement with each of the lines.
We'll then have a year to introduce the service level agreements with each of the carriers, he said.
Portnet intends to have five pilot schemes in place with a yet-to-be-chosen group of customers.
We're working hard at getting back to building a relationship with the lines, said Kingwill - laying emphasis on the word with.
He sees five key steps in this process:
l The appointment of a g.m. for container business;
l The advisory/operational contracts with P&O Ports representatives - busy guiding the terminal at Durban into a productive future;
l The agreement on compensation;
l The service level agreements; and
l The labour incentive schemes.
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