Arab News
Arab news,
Mon, Mar 30, 2026 | Shawwal 11, 1447
Saudi Arabia extends container fee waiver to support exports
Saudi Arabia:
Container availability is set to improve in Saudi
Arabia after authorities extended fee exemptions on inbound empty containers at
two key eastern ports, a move aimed at easing supply constraints and supporting
exporters.
The Saudi Ports Authority, also known as Mawani,
said it has doubled the exemption period on storage fees for empty containers
from 10 days to 20 days at King Abdulaziz Port in Dammam and Jubail Commercial
Port.
The measure is aimed at incentivizing shipping
lines to reposition more empty containers into the Kingdom, including surplus
units held at other Gulf ports, improving availability for exporters. Lower
storage costs reduce a key deterrent for carriers and could help smooth cargo
flows and ease logistics bottlenecks.
This comes at a time of heightened regional
uncertainty, with escalating conflict between the US and Israel and Iran
disrupting navigation through the Strait of Hormuz — one of the world’s most
critical oil and gas chokepoints, through which roughly a fifth of global oil
supplies pass.
Daipayan Adhikari, head of strategic
projects and logistics solutions at United Warehouse Co. Ltd., told Arab News
the move directly addresses a critical bottleneck.
He said: “This is a practical move to improve
container availability and export efficiency in the Eastern Province. Extending
the empty container exemption from 10 to 20 days at King Abdulaziz Port and
Jubail Commercial Port will encourage shipping lines to reposition empty
containers into Saudi ports.”
Adhikari added: “For exporters and
logistics operators, this means better container availability, smoother cargo
movement, and potentially lower operational costs. It is another step
strengthening Saudi Arabia’s position as a regional logistics hub under the
National Transport and Logistics Strategy.”
Recent disruptions have led to delays, higher
freight rates, and shifting shipping patterns, increasing pressure on supply
chains and container availability across the Gulf.
Against this backdrop, Saudi Arabia has been
rolling out measures to sustain maritime activity. Earlier this month, Mawani
introduced additional support services for vessels and added five new shipping
services with major global carriers, including Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd, with a
combined capacity of over 63,000 twenty-foot equivalent units.
Container handling at Saudi ports has also been
rising, climbing 20.89 percent year on year in February to 667,882 TEUs.