Panama’s ‘dangerous precedent’: why global ports appear pawns as politics trump contracts

Panama’s decision to invalidate port contracts with a Hong Kong-based conglomerate is sending shock waves through global port investment, analysts warn, creating a destabilising precedent amid rising geopolitical fragmentation.

Tensions are escalating in the Central American nation following a top court’s ruling that voided CK Hutchison Holdings’ port concession – a long-term agreement granting rights to operate a port – from the 1990s as “unconstitutional”. The local port authority later said that APM Terminals, the terminal arm of Danish shipping and logistics giant Maersk, would serve as the interim administrator for the two ports.

“This is a situation that is driven much more by politics than by any commercial or strictly legal motivations,” said Ralph Leszczynski, head of research for shipbroking and shipping services group Banchero Costa.

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And he emphasised that this also serves as a warning that port facilities are increasingly seen worldwide as politically strategic assets.

“It could become a dangerous precedent if concessions or contracts could be invalidated at a whim anywhere due to geopolitical pressure,” he said.

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South China Morning Post

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