Vizhinjam International Seaport — Commissioning and India's Transhipment Ambition
Summary
Vizhinjam International Seaport in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, began commercial operations in July 2024 after over a decade of delays, becoming India's first dedicated transhipment port.
●Developed on a public-private partnership model by the Kerala government and Adani Ports, Vizhinjam's natural depth of 18–20 metres accommodates ultra-large container vessels (ULCVs) without dredging.
●Located just 10 nautical miles from the main east-west shipping lane and near the southern tip of India, it directly competes with Colombo (Sri Lanka) and Singapore as a transhipment hub for Indian cargo — currently 75% of India's transhipment trade is handled at foreign ports.
Infrastructure & Urban Development
Practise past questions on related topics in Arena.
Vizhinjam is India's first dedicated transhipment port — a port where containers from large ships are transferred to smaller feeder vessels for onward distribution.
●Currently, 75% of India's transhipment traffic goes to Colombo (Sri Lanka), Salalah (Oman), and Singapore, generating approximately $200 million annually in port fees paid to foreign ports.
●Vizhinjam's natural depth (18–20m, no dredging needed) and proximity to the east-west shipping lane (10 nautical miles) make it the only Indian port naturally positioned to compete for this traffic.
Every container transhipped at Colombo instead of Vizhinjam is a dollar paid to Sri Lanka for a service India should be providing — the port's strategic significance is about capturing value in India's own supply chain.
Factual Pointers
Practice · 2 questions
Consider the following statements about Vizhinjam International Seaport:
1. It is India's first dedicated transhipment port.
2. It is located in the Kozhikode district of Kerala.
3. It is being developed under a Public-Private Partnership with the Kerala government holding majority equity.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
The term 'transhipment' in the context of ports refers to: