MEDIA RELEASE: Shipping lines urged to provide detention relief

Monday, July 8, 2019
Freight & Trade Alliance (FTA), the Australian Peak Shippers Association (APSA) and Container Transport Alliance of Australia (CTAA) have appealed to shipping lines to waive container detention and related charges as a result of the escalation of industrial action at DP World Australia (DPWA) terminals.
 
The DPWA Enterprise Agreement (EA) expired on 28 February 2019, with no public sign that DPWA is any closer to finalising a new Agreement through negotiations with the maritime union.  Protected industrial action is now underway, resulting in escalating stoppages this week at DPWA terminals in Brisbane, Sydney, Fremantle and Melbourne.
 
The latest increase in protected industrial action will see the cessation of all DPWA terminal operations in Brisbane (today, Monday, 8 July), Melbourne (Wednesday, 10 July), Fremantle and Sydney (Friday, 12 July) for 48-hour periods.
 
These stoppages will result in containers being stranded in DPWA terminals nationally.
 
"While DPWA has previously made efforts to reduce the impact on Australian shippers, by extending import availability times, waiving storage and sub-contracting vessels, shipping lines also need to be sympathetic in considering financial relief at the end of the container logistics chain through the waiver of container detention fees." says Travis Brooks-Garrett, Director of Freight & Trade Alliance.
 
FTA/CTAA/APSA have called on the shipping lines to extend free time on container detention for all containers effected by the escalating dispute and to waive associated charges.
 
"Shipping lines need to do more to protect their customers. This is not business as usual. This is a real test of how shipping lines treat their customers locally".
 
"Stevedore partners are appointed by the shipping lines, not the shippers or transport operators", says Neil Chambers, Director of the CTAA, "Shipping lines cannot wipe their hands of accountability, they are a party to the current disruption and need to play a role in minimising the impact to their shippers and reducing associated costs."
 
"If import containers are held up in DPWA terminals and the shipping lines maintain their strict detention free timeframes, there will be little physical chance for the containers to be processed through the landside supply chain and be returned empty to the designated location in the time allocated."
 
"Transport operators certainly will not be accepting unrealistic container return timeframes, leaving importers exposed to potentially significant detention penalties, unless shipping lines change their policies in these exceptional circumstances." Neil Chambers said.   
 
Travis Brooks-Garrett concluded that "FTA / APSA and CTAA will also be providing updates to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) as to how the shipping lines are responding to these exceptional circumstances locally."
 
 
-- ENDS –
 
 
Queries regarding this Release can be directed to:
FTA Director, Travis Brooks-Garrett, 0434 105 145 / 
tbrooks-garrett@ftalliance.com.au, or to CTAA Director, Neil Chambers, 0413 662 263 / neil.chambers@ctaction.com.au
 
 
Freight & Trade Alliance (FTA) is Australia's leading representative body for the international supply chain sector bringing together importers, exporters, customs brokers, freight forwarders, logistics service providers and industry groups.
 
Container Transport Alliance Australia (CTAA) is strong Alliance of leading businesses engaged in the container transport logistics industry.  CTAA Alliance companies account for the majority of containerised freight handled in capital city ports in Australia