Overseas Cargo Statistics: Year ended June 2007 – Media Release
The overseas cargo loaded (exports) and unloaded (imports) at New Zealand ports increased in both weight and value during the year ended June 2007, Statistics New Zealand said today. The percentage value increase exceeded the percentage weight increase for both exported and imported cargo, with rises in sea-freight leading all of these increases.
Logs, wood and wood articles, particularly pine logs, dominated the weight increase in export cargo – the first annual increase in total export cargo weight since 2003 – while dairy produce led the increase in value. The weight increase in import cargo was led by the fertiliser and animal feed groups, while mineral fuels were the largest contributor to the value increase. For all of the mentioned commodity groups, sea-freight accounted for at least 99.5 percent of cargo, by both weight and value.
Although the value of air-freighted export cargo increased by almost 5 percent in the year ended June 2007, the weight actually fell by 2.3 percent. By weight, the most air-freighted commodity group was fish, crustaceans and molluscs. The largest contributor to this was salmon – two-thirds of all salmon exports were air-freighted. Air-freight accounted for only 6.6 percent of fish, crustacean and mollusc exports by weight, but almost a quarter by value.
| Geoff Bascand |
20 September 2007 |
Government Statistician |
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