15.9 C
Hamburg
Monday, June 2, 2025
Home Industry Opinions Kale Logistics says 30% of ports not ready to meet IMO’s January...

Kale Logistics says 30% of ports not ready to meet IMO’s January 2024 digital mandate

The study involving 200 ports found that 30% are not ready to meet impending electronic data exchange regulations despite potential savings of US$50 billion.

Kale Logistics Solutions has published a readiness survey of 200 ports that revealed 30% are not prepared to adopt the International Maritime Organisation’s (IMO’s) Maritime Single Window (MSW) mandate, which becomes compulsory worldwide from 1 January 2024.

Kale highlighted the urgency for the industry to speed up its digital transformation as it unveiled the survey results, which also cited high implementation costs, long timelines, and varying levels of digital readiness as leading factors hindering regulatory compliance.

The study involved ports located throughout the Asia Pacific, Middle East, Europe, Africa, North America, and South America, and emphasised that Port Community Systems embedded with an MSW are integral to achieving the true potential of a port.

“The purpose of this study was to identify the tangible benefits the maritime industry can achieve with technology intervention, and the results showed potential savings of up to US$50 billion annually by using MSW platforms,” said Vineet Malhotra, co-founder and director of Kale Logistics Solutions.

“However, these benefits are subject to 100% adoption of the MSW, and our report reveals that ports are encountering a number of barriers that hinder this digitalisation. The MSW concept has the potential to revolutionise the international shipping industry,” added Malhotra.

MSW platforms bring major sustainability benefits by digitising documentation, streamlining processes, and improving information exchange, resulting in reduced paper usage and more efficient vessel management, ultimately lowering emissions and environmental impact.

On average 12 agencies collaborate on one ship-shore operation, and the MSW simplifies documentary procedures between all actors involved and ensures information only needs to be inputted once.

Kale’s MSW platform is compliant with IMO standards and enables information and documentation to be transferred electronically between maritime and port stakeholders, which will become a compulsory requirement from the start of 2024.

“The importance of this study will sow the seed for a digital revolution in the maritime industry worldwide, demonstrating how digitisation can not only bring order to the ongoing chaotic operations in the industry but also achieve significant sustainability goals in the long run,” noted Malhotra.

The report was released by Shyam Jagannathan, Director General of Shipping, Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, Government of India, at the Global Maritime India Summit in Mumbai, India.





Latest Posts

How Managed Web Hosting Simplifies WordPress Maintenance and Security

Ever felt like managing your WordPress site is like having an extra full-time job?  From constant plugin updates to worrying about hackers and random errors,...

Hapag-Lloyd revamps Africa structure with new four-Area setup

Hapag-Lloyd has decided to proceed with a strategic restructuring of its Africa organizational setup across the continent. The German shipping company will change its current...

Wan Hai christens new 13,100 TEU boxship

Wan Hai Lines held a ship naming ceremony for WAN HAI A19, accompanied by a charity event on 29 May at Samsung Heavy Industries...

Samskip commences UK-Rotterdam service

Samskip will offer a new direct connection between the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. The Rotterdam-based ocean carrier will launch a new shortsea container service...

Container lines report soaring earnings

Ocean carriers have reported strong first-quarter results, despite geopolitical challenges and an uncertain market environment. Nearly all major container lines (that officially publish their financial...
error: Content is protected !!