India: “Bharat Container Line” is taking shape, with SCI + Concor as key shareholders

India is accelerating on a strategic issue: the creation of Bharat Container Line (BCL), a future company designed to secure part of its maritime capacities and support the country’s industrial ambition. According to available information, the Shipping Corporation of India (SCI) and Concor (Container Corporation of India) are expected to take the lead roles in the shareholding, surrounded by public investors from the port world.

The arrangement, still in finalization, aims for a “100% public sector” structure, with a memorandum of understanding signing announced once the capital partners are definitively settled. In the envisioned operational distribution, SCI would be positioned to charter the ships, while Concor would provide a heavy logistical base: a fleet of approximately 56,000 TEU of containers, a network of 66 terminals (ICD/CFS and domestic terminals), as well as over 400 trains and more than 370,000 square meters of warehousing.

On the ports side, several public port authorities are cited as potential minority shareholders, with a clear logic: create a sufficiently capitalized company, share the risk, and ensure rapid execution. In the background, the objective is to strengthen the continuity of “Made in India” supply chains by combining sea + rail + inland platforms, on a very integrated model.

 

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