The evolution of a regional container port system: the Pearl River Delta |
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Authors: | James J. Wang Brian Slack |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong, People's Republic of China;b Department of Geography, Concordia University, 1455 De Maisonneuve Blvd Ouest, Montreal, Que., Canada H3G 1M8 |
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Abstract: | This study investigates the progress of container port system development in South China, focusing particularly on the interplay between Hong Kong and the other ports in the Pearl River Delta (PRD) region. After identifying the downgrading trend of Hong Kong from a transshipment hub port for Asia and for China as a whole to a regional load center and the emergence of other deep-sea direct-service ports, the paper looks into the causes of this structural change of the port system. Four major causes are identified: the cost-base competition, the impact of the unique “one-country two-systems” policy, the impact of globalization and container standardization, and the impact of multi-modal accessibility and connectivity. The paper reveals that the interplay between different governments and between the governments and port operators are the local mechanisms that together as a whole respond to the shippers’ needs and the shipping lines’ pressure. It confirms that the interdependencies and competitive relations between terminals are being played out at a regional level. While the particular situation of the PRD is unique in many regards, the features emerging there, with its dominant hub, its network of feeder ports and its emerging direct-service non-hub terminals, are being replicated elsewhere. |
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Keywords: | Container transport Port China Hong Kong Transport development |
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