Indonesia Shipping
Several perahu pinisi--indigenous trading vessels--moored in the
old harbor of Sunda Kelapa, Jakarta
Courtesy Harvey Follender
Maritime transportation became the focus of a major
investment
program and a series of regulatory reforms during the
1980s because
of its importance in international trade. Like many areas
of
government policy, shipping and port policies had become
increasingly restrictive and bureaucratic during the 1970s
and
early 1980s, before being dramatically liberalized during
the midand late 1980s. The Indonesian National Shipping Company
(Pelni)
was established in 1952, and by 1965 with eighty-four
ships
accounted for 50 percent of the tonnage of the interisland
domestic
merchant fleet. Pelni's share began to erode thereafter,
declining
to around 18 percent of interisland capacity by 1982,
although it
maintained a virtual monopoly on passenger travel.
Government policy also required that shipping companies
established after 1974 be majority-owned by pribumi
businesses and mandated firm size and freight charges.
Restrictions
on new entrants were imposed through five classes of
shipping
license: interisland shipping, with a minimum capacity of
175 gross
tons; local shipping, with 35 to 175 gross tons;
traditional
shipping, which included perahu pinisi, the
two-masted
sailing vessels originating among the Buginese in Sulawesi
Selatan
Province, and small motorized craft; ships chartered by
the
government to serve remote ports; and special vehicles
engaged in
carrying bulk freight such as crude oil, fertilizer, and
other
industrial cargos. Foreign vessels were required to obtain
a
special license to enter Indonesian ports, and a policy to
reduce
transshipment through Singapore designated four gateway
ports for
international shipments from Indonesia. A US$4 billion
investment
plan was launched in 1983 to expand the domestic shipping
industry
and port facilities. Almost US$1 billion was earmarked for
upgrading the four gateway ports--Tanjung Priok
(Tanjungperiuk)
Subdistrict in North Jakarta (Jakarta Utara), Surabaya in
Jawa
Timur Province, Belawan near Medan in Sumatera Utara
Province, and
Ujungpandang in Sulawesi Selatan Province--together with
fortythree collector ports and trunk ports that fed the gateway
ports in
a routing hierarchy.
In 1985 a major deregulation that included the
suspension of
local customs operations greatly simplified shipping
regulations,
permitted market-determined freight charges, and abolished
the
special license for foreign vessels, which were by then
permitted
to dock at about 100 of Indonesia's approximately 300
registered
ports if they had a local Indonesian agent
(see Aid and Trade Policies
, this ch.). In 1988 the five licensing categories
were
simplified into two--oceangoing and regional shipping and
interisland shipping. New entrants, including foreign
joint
ventures, were permitted with no restrictions on size of
fleets,
and some categories of commercial businesses were
permitted to
operate their own fleets with no additional license. The
investment
program to expand the domestic fleet, which since 1984 had
mandated
the elimination of vessels older than thirty years, was
suspended
indefinitely, and the gateway hierarchy was effectively
undermined
by more liberal route permits, although investment in port
infrastructure still centered on the four gateway ports.
By 1989 the entire domestic merchant fleet included 35
oceangoing vessels with a capacity of 447,000 deadweight
tons; by
the earlier licensing categories there were 259
interisland vessels
with a capacity of 466,000 deadweight tons, over 1,000
modernized
local ships with a capacity of 158,000 deadweight tons,
almost
4,000 traditional ships with a capacity of 200,000
deadweight tons,
and 1,900 special bulk carriers with a capacity of more
than 2
million deadweight tons. About 60 percent of the total
cargo
shipped was on special bulk carriers, dominated by crude
oil and
natural gas; of the general cargo carried by ship, which
in FY 1989
totaled about 40 million tons, about 80 percent was
carried on
oceangoing or interisland class vehicles, with the
remainder split
evenly between local and traditional craft. The importance
of the
traditional craft may have been underestimated by official
figures,
since independent estimates ranged up to 10,000 such
craft,
although sailing vessels were largely replaced by
motorized craft.
Additionally, there were some 21,600 kilometers of inland
waterways
on which goods might be carried, 48 percent of which were
in
Kalimantan and 25 percent in Sumatra.
Data as of November 1992
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