NANNING, Jul 22 (NNN-XINHUA) – A container ship loaded with shrimp slices, melons and aquatic products, departed from the seaport of Muara in Brunei, heading to Qinzhou Port in south China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. The cargo will later be delivered by rail to south-west China for sale.
Muara Port is Brunei’s largest port, while Qinzhou Port in the Beibu Gulf is an important hub for trade and economic exchanges between China and member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
In the past, cargo delivered between the two ports needed to be transferred via a third port, which could take two to three weeks or even longer. Now, the direct container shipping route has cut the shipping time to just one week, with the costs reduced by some 30 percent, according to the Guangxi Beibu Gulf International Port Group Co., Ltd.
China and Brunei have had close exchanges dating back to ancient times, and the ancient Marine Silk Road was a major trade route for both sides.
In 2013, China put forward the Belt and Road Initiative, to foster drivers for global development, injecting new impetus into economic and trade exchanges between China and Brunei.
Guangxi Beibu Gulf International Port Group Co., Ltd. and Brunei’s Darussalam Assets, formed a joint venture in 2017, to operate the Muara Port container terminal and bulk cargo terminal, with a total investment of 1.03 billion yuan (about 144 million U.S. dollars) and an operation period of 60 years.
“It quickly and efficiently injected new vitality into Muara Port and fully released the potential of the port,” said Fazilah Yassin, chief operating officer of the joint venture, adding, the port has been profitable for six consecutive years, achieving an annual net profit growth of 24 percent.
Data shows that, the Muara Port completed over 1.55 million tonnes of cargo throughput in 2022, an increase of 20.03 percent over the previous year, and doubled its operating income from 2017. The number of local employees at the port has increased from 120 in 2017, to 260 now, with more than 96 percent of the workforce localised.
The number of container liner routes between Muara Port and the surrounding ports has increased from six to 10, and cargo trade has become more convenient and efficient, greatly accelerating the efficiency of international logistics.
In 2022, bilateral trade between China and Brunei reached a record high of 3.08 billion U.S. dollars, according to data released by the customs authorities of China.
In addition to infrastructure, investment is expanding in many other areas, with more and more Chinese enterprises seeking cooperation and development in Brunei.
At Pulau Muara Besar (Big Muara Island), a joint venture between China and Brunei is the largest single foreign direct investment project in Brunei. The refinery and petrochemical project invested by China’s Hengyi Petrochemical Co., Ltd. produces refined products, such as diesel and gasoline, and chemicals, such as benzene, extending Brunei’s oil and gas industry chain. The first phase of the project has an annual crude oil processing capacity of eight million tonnes.
Across the sea in Guangxi, another petrochemical project of Hengyi, which is currently under construction, is expected to be operational by the end of 2024.
“We will transport the products of the Bruneian project as raw materials, to produce chemical products to promote the petrochemical industrial cooperation between the two places,” said Wang Tieming, deputy general manager of the company’s Guangxi project.– NNN-XINHUA