Karachi Port’s crossing of the 2,000-ship mark in the outgoing fiscal year is more than a pleasing statistic for the Maritime Affairs Ministry. It is a reminder that Pakistan’s geography, so often invoked in speeches and policy papers, begins to matter only when it is converted into reliability and commercial advantage. The port received 2,003 ships, its highest traffic in eight years, with arrivals up by 7.5 per cent, total tonnage exceeding 84.4 million tonnes and Gross Registered Tonnage rising by three per cent.
The immediate context is clear. The Iran war disrupted shipping patterns across the Arab Gulf, forcing carriers to reassess routes. Pakistan, by virtue of proximity, found itself better placed than usual. Cargo that may previously have moved through more established regional hubs began to see Karachi and Port Qasim as workable alternatives. This was not the result of a grand maritime awakening. It was a market signal produced by instability elsewhere. But intelligent states do not waste such signals. They read them, respond to them and institutionalise the gains before normalcy returns.
To its credit, Islamabad did not sit idle. The revision of international transhipment rules in March, including smoother handling of cargo within and outside sea and air ports, reflected an overdue recognition that Pakistan cannot remain a transit afterthought while sitting on one of the region’s most useful coastlines. The authorisation of temporary storage facilities at Port Qasim and concessions on port dues, wharfage and storage also showed that policy can be flexible when pressure is real. Shipping agents were right to say that Pakistan was previously not even in the race. The disruption has put it at the starting line.
That, however, is very different from saying the race has been won. Global carriers are not sentimental. They do not reward geography for its own sake. They reward lower cost, faster clearance, predictable rules, safe cargo handling, reliable berthing windows and fewer avoidable delays. Once Middle East tensions subside and traditional Gulf routes resume, emergency traffic will quickly test whether Pakistan was merely a temporary diversion or a serious transhipment option. If the answer is higher tariffs, slow customs, uncertain paperwork, port congestion and weak hinterland connectivity, the ships will leave as quietly as they came.
The work ahead is therefore practical, not rhetorical. Pakistan must make its port tariffs competitive with Dubai, Salalah, Colombo and other regional alternatives, revolutionising its warehousing, cold-chain facilities, re-export services and inland freight connections. This also requires coordination beyond the Maritime Affairs Ministry. The Federal Board of Revenue, Commerce Ministry, Railways, Finance Division, port authorities, shipping agents and private terminal operators must all work from the same playbook. Ports cannot become regional hubs if customs is working at one speed, rail freight at another and tariff policy at a third. *