ENG-2008 — Page 324

Hong Kong Year Books 香港年報 All

260 Transport

investors and the efficient workforce, as well as the constructive partnership and co-operation between the private and public sectors.

Efficient, reliable and well-connected, Hong Kong's airport and port are vital to the territory's logistics industry. The airport handles an average of almost 70 000 tonnes of cargo every week. A new air cargo terminal is being planned and would be available in early 2010 to provide additional capacity to meet anticipated demand from growth.

Hong Kong is also home to the most productive and efficient container terminals and to the biggest private terminal operator in the world. A comprehensive network of container line services connects the port of Hong Kong with over 500 destinations across the globe. Coupled with its round-the-clock operation, the nine container terminals at Kwai Chung-Tsing Yi provide a total handling capacity of more than 19 million TEUS per year.

Development of Hong Kong Logistics Industry

The Government is committed to maintaining and strengthening Hong Kong as Asia's preferred international transport and logistics hub.

The Government provides the necessary infrastructure and environment for Hong Kong's logistics sector to grow. It also promotes closer co-operation with the Mainland, in particular, the Pearl River Delta region to achieve synergies in logistics. development.

The Hong Kong Logistics Development Council, chaired by the Secretary for Transport and Housing, provides a forum for the private and public sectors to foster logistics development to strengthen Hong Kong's position as the leading logistics hub in Asia. Five project groups have been set up under the council to develop and implement work programmes for physical infrastructure, information connectivity, human resource development, support for small and medium enterprises, and marketing and promotion.

To enhance the competitiveness of Hong Kong's trucking sector and the logistics. industry in general, the Government sponsored a pilot project on the development of an On-Board Trucker Information System (OBTIS). OBTIS is an information and communications technology platform, which helps enhance efficiency in fleet management and connectivity between truckers and stakeholders along the supply chain. The first phase of the pilot was launched in 2007 to test the system's basic features on 50 trucks. A full exercise, involving 500 trucks, will be conducted in

2009.

To ensure that employees of the logistics sector are kept abreast of new technology for and development of the trade, the council jointly organised training programmes, workshops and forums with industry associations for logistics. practitioners. It also sponsored a number of events for the sharing of experience by stakeholders.

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.