Air Freight News

Drewry port throughput indices for July 2020

Aug 06, 2020

The Drewry Container Port Throughput Indices are a series of volume growth/decline indices based on monthly throughput data for a sample of over 220 ports worldwide, representing over 75% of global volumes. The base point for the indices is January 2012 = 100.

Drewry’s latest assessment - July 2020

  • The global container port throughput index showed little change at 122.5 points in May 2020. However, it was 1% higher than in April 2020, but more than 10 points (7.9%) down compared to May 2019, recording the lowest recorded May reading in three years because of the COVID-19 outbreak.
  • After China’s (the largest region’s) February figure touched the lowest level since 2015, the country returned to near-normal levels in May 2020. The index gained more than 6 points (4.8%) in a single month to 138 points in May 2020 which was the same as in November 2019. This recovery was witnessed in China with no other region being even close to its pre-COVID level.
  • Asia excl. China was more than 11 points (8.8%) down compared to May 2019. The index witnessed more than 12-point cumulative decline in the last two months (April and May 2020) with the May index plunging to 119.4 from 133 in December 2019.
  • After showing some improvements in April 2020, the index for North America dropped again in May 2020 by more than 20 points (14.6%) compared to the figure in May 2019 as the pandemic severely impacted the region. Los Angeles alone contributed more than 32% to this annual decline. The port throughput index for Latin America witnessed 2.6% monthly and 1.3% annual decline, which was the lowest among all other regions’ yearly fall.
  • Europe’s index deteriorated further to 111.1 points in May 2020 with 2.9% monthly and close to 12% annual decline. On the other hand, after reaching a 52-month low level in April 2020, Africa saw improvements in its port handling where the index value increased by 2.1% month-on-month, but was still around 14% lower than in May 2019. A point to note here is that the index figures for Africa are based on a relatively small sample.

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