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Iran Freight Transport Report Q3 2009

Published by: Business Monitor International

Published: Aug. 5, 2009 - 63 Pages


Table of Contents


Executive Summary
SWOT Analysis
Iran Political SWOT
Iran Economic SWOT
Iran Business Environment SWOT
Business Environment Ratings
Table: Middle East And Africa Freight Transport Business Environment Ratings
Iran Logistics Performance Index (LPI)
Politics - Long-Term Risk
Economics - Long-Term Risk
Freight Transport Growth
Transport Infrastructure Growth
Regulatory Environment
Competitive Environment
Transport Intensity
Political Risk Summary
Economic Risk Summary
Business Environment Risk Summary
Legal Issues
Red Tape
Industry Trends And Developments
Rail
Sea
Pipelines
Industry Forecast Scenario
Quarterly Oil Products Price Outlook
Table: Oil Product Price Assumptions, Q408-Q409 (US$/bbl)
Table: Oil Product Price Forecasts, 2006-2013 (US$/bbl)
Macroeconomic Forecasts
Table: Iran - Economic Activity, 2006-2013
Transport Outlook
Table: Freight Transport Industry Indicators, 2006-2013
Table: Freight Tonnage Carried, Domestic And International, 2006-2013
Trade Environment
Foreign Trade Regime
Tax Regime
Table: Iran - Total Value Of Imports, 2006-2013 (US$mn)
Table: Iran - Total Value Of Exports, 2006-2013 (US$mn)
Table: Top Export Destinations, 2002-2006 (US$mn)
Table: Iran’s Export Trade, 2003-2006 (% growth y-o-y)
Table: Iran’s Import Trade, 2001-2006 (% growth y-o-y)
Table: Iran’s Top Import Sources, 2000-2006 (US$mn)
Market Overview
Multi-Modal
Competitive Landscape: Multi-Modal
Road
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Road
Rail
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Rail
Air
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Aviation
Company Profile: Iran Air
Water
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Maritime
Company Profile: IRISL
Pipelines
Competitive Landscape: Pipelines
Country Snapshot: Iran Demographic Data
Section 1: Population
Source: UN Population Division
Table: Demographic Indicators, 2005-2030
Table: Rural/Urban Breakdown, 2005-2030
Section 2: Education And Healthcare
Table: Education, 2002-2005
Table: Vital Statistics, 2005-2030
Section 3: Labour Market And Spending Power
Table: Employment Indicators, 1996-2005
Table: Consumer Expenditure, 2000-2012 (US$)
Table: Average Annual Manufacturing Wages, 2000-2012
BMI Forecast Modelling
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Transport Industry
Sources

Abstract

Container throughput at the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas fell year on year (y-o-y) by 6.8% in May 2009.The decline is in line with BMI’s predictions of a decrease of 6.4% in throughput for the whole of 2009.

In May 2009, the port of Bandar Abbas, which is operated by Tidewater, handled a total of 160,452twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), down from 172,103 TEUs in May 2008. The port’s May 2009throughput did, however, register a month on month (m-o-m) growth of 3.2% from April 2009’sthroughput figure of 155,410 TEUs. May 2009's y-o-y decline is line with the port’s container volumesfor 2009 so far. Throughput at the port for January 1 2009 - May 31 2009 stands at 777,585 TEUs, a y-oycontainer throughput fall of 6.58% from the same period's throughput of 832,329 in 2008. BMI notesthat the latest container throughput results at Bandar Abbas demonstrate a decline, which we havepredicted and expect to continue throughout the rest of the year. In 2008, the port broke the 2mn TEUmark and registered a y-o-y growth of 16.1%. BMI forecasts that throughput at the facility will decline by6.4% in 2009 to 1.87mn TEU. This decline is due to our predictions for Iran’s trade sector. BMI’s MiddleEast Country Risk Desk forecasts that the country's imports will fall by 4%, with Iran’s exports expectedto decrease by 5%. We expect throughput at Bandar Abbas to recover quickly after 2009, with containerthroughput growth of 6.7% forecast for 2010, which will place the facility on the road to recovering itspre-downturn throughput volumes. The port is located in the south of Iran and, according to the ContainerManagement Journal; the facility is the most important port in the Persian Gulf region after the UAE’sJebel Ali port in terms of container operations.

In our latest Iran Freight Transport Report, BMI concludes that total freight traffic will grow by anaverage of 3.8% per annum in the 2009-2013 forecast period. Our forecast reflects the interplay ofnegative and positive factors. On the negative side, the turbulence over the recent elections is a downsiderisk. It is also clear that necessary investments in new pipelines, shipping and port and rail capacity havesimply not been made. Also weighing down on the forecast is the fact that the oil price boom is over forthe next couple of years, reducing foreign currency earnings. There are, of course, positives. One is globaldemand for Iran’s natural gas and petrochemicals, much of which will need to be pumped to coastalterminals and shipped by liquefied natural gas (LNG) tankers. New investment and export deals withChina underline this potential. The general growth of the Iranian economy and trade, although moderate,will also provide support.

By transport modes, road-haulage growth has lagged behind GDP in recent years, reflecting the poorquality of the highway network. Our forecast provides for a catching-up process, as overland trade withIran’s immediate neighbours begins to grow. For 2009-2013, we predict annual average road-haulagevolume growth of 4.0%, ahead of GDP. Rail freight has lagged behind the general growth of the Iranianeconomy, but here we are less optimistic over the ‘catch-up’ potential. Despite much talk of building anew rail-based north-south transport corridor linking Iran to its regional neighbours, we take the view thatthere will not be significant increases in capacity during the forecast period. Rail-freight growth willaverage an unimpressive 2.0% per annum. Airfreight will grow at an annual average of 4.8%, constrainedby an ageing aircraft fleet and the effect of US sanctions. For the core freight modes of pipelines andshipping we see the global recession of 2009-2010 taking its toll. Pipeline throughput will average 4.8%annual growth, with shipping at 5.3%, both ahead of GDP growth by a small margin. Iran sits at thebottom end of BMI freight rating for markets in the Middle East and Africa (MEA) region. Given thecountry’s abundance of natural resources, this is a reflection on the domestic political situation, regionaluncertainties and lack of a track record in providing investment opportunities in the transport sector.

The total value of transport and communications GDP will rise to US$35.6bn in nominal terms by 2013,representing 6.8% of Iran’s GDP. Projections based on employment figures compiled for the ILO in 1996suggest that Iran’s transport and communications sector employed 3.41mn people, or 20.5% of the labourforce, in 2008

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