NEW protocols and lower terminal handling charges are expected to boost Jordan's Aqaba Container Terminal (ACT) as a gateway for Iraq-bound cargo, reports Dubai's Maritime Standard.
'ACT is 550 kilometres, or 36 hours by road, from the Iraqi border town of Traibil 48 hours from Baghdad,' said the report.
Containers imported into Iraq will no longer have to be transloaded onto new trucks as they cross the Jordanian/Iraqi border.
'The Aqaba Container Terminal, a Maersk APM Terminals operation, has been working hard over the years to develop a competitive gateway to Iraq,' said ACT managing director, Steven Yoogalingam.
'This will enhance the already strong Iraqi port system and gives the business communities of both countries a fantastic transportation system to better support economic development in the region.'
Last month, ACT welcomed the maiden call of the new AR1 direct service linking Aqaba in Jordan with ports in China, Korea, Singapore and Malaysia. The service is jointly operated by THE Alliance members Wan Hai, Hapag-Lloyd, Yang Ming (YML) and the Ocean Network Express (ONE). The extra capacity deployed by the lines into Aqaba provides ample space to support the needs of the Iraqi market.
The terminal handled 804,000 TEU in 2017, making it the second-busiest container facility on the Red Sea after Jeddah. Iraqi imports moving through Aqaba port grew by 86 per cent in 2017, with the leading sources being China, Turkey, Iran, South Korea and the United States.
'ACT is 550 kilometres, or 36 hours by road, from the Iraqi border town of Traibil 48 hours from Baghdad,' said the report.
Containers imported into Iraq will no longer have to be transloaded onto new trucks as they cross the Jordanian/Iraqi border.
'The Aqaba Container Terminal, a Maersk APM Terminals operation, has been working hard over the years to develop a competitive gateway to Iraq,' said ACT managing director, Steven Yoogalingam.
'This will enhance the already strong Iraqi port system and gives the business communities of both countries a fantastic transportation system to better support economic development in the region.'
Last month, ACT welcomed the maiden call of the new AR1 direct service linking Aqaba in Jordan with ports in China, Korea, Singapore and Malaysia. The service is jointly operated by THE Alliance members Wan Hai, Hapag-Lloyd, Yang Ming (YML) and the Ocean Network Express (ONE). The extra capacity deployed by the lines into Aqaba provides ample space to support the needs of the Iraqi market.
The terminal handled 804,000 TEU in 2017, making it the second-busiest container facility on the Red Sea after Jeddah. Iraqi imports moving through Aqaba port grew by 86 per cent in 2017, with the leading sources being China, Turkey, Iran, South Korea and the United States.