SUBIC BAY FREEPORT, Philippines — Authorities here reported recently that total revenue generated by the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) from seaport operations in the first six months of this year have already exceeded the total 12-month income in 2008.
“This is a result of the efforts by the SBMA to aggressively market the Subic port and to attract more shippers, importers, brokers and forwarders to Subic,“ said Ferdinand Hernandez, SBMA senior deputy administrator for operations.
Hernandez said Subic seaport’s six-month revenue rose to P276.49 million this year, thus surpassing last year’s 12-month record of P276.24 by 0.09 percent or P244,153.
According to the SBMA Seaport Department, Subic’s seaport has consistently shown an upward trend since 2005, with a 5.41 percent growth recorded in 2006; 14.29 percent in 2007; and 26.63 percent in 2008.
“Now, we are confident that at the rate we’re going, our figure at the end of this year may even be double that of last year,” said Hernandez.
In the month of June alone, the SBMA Seaport Department recorded an income of P60.69 million, the highest monthly revenue ever recorded in the last five years.
The Subic seaport also earlier posted record-breaking monthly revenues this year: P37.62 million in January, P41.57 million in February, P51.01 million in March, P44.49 million in April, and P41.07 million in May.
The SBMA said seaport revenues were derived from vessel and cargo charges, leases or rentals, processing fees, SBMA shares from joint ventures, and other billings for port users.
For the first semester of this year, the bulk of seaport revenue came from vessel charges, totalling P112.11 million.
According to Hernandez the SBMA has pegged its revenue forecast for 2009 at P316.3 million.
“This means that our current first-half figure of more than P276 million is already 87.41 percent of our P316.3-million goal for this year,” Hernandez stressed.
“Hopefully, we will exceed our target at the end of the year,” he added.
SBMA seaport manager Perfecto Pascual said that the SBMA’s goal-setting program has so far worked wonders for the seaport department.