The Venezuela Freight Transport Report

    • Independent 5-year Freight Transport industry forecasts for Venezuela.
    • Original Freight Transport market research and Freight Transport sector trend analysis for the Venezuela Freight Transport industry.
    • Competitive intelligence, Venezuelan Freight Transport company rankings and SWOT analyses on international and domestic Freight Transport companies in Venezuela.


The Venezuela Freight Transport Report has been researched at source, and features latest-available data covering commercial transport and logistics by road, rail, air and water; 5-year industry forecasts through end-2012; company rankings and competitive landscapes covering leading multinational and national operators; and analysis of latest industry trends, opportunities, projects and regulatory changes.

Business Monitor International’s Venezuelan Freight Transport Report provides industry professionals and strategists, sector analysts, investors, trade associations and regulatory bodies with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on the Venezuelan freight transport and logistics industry.

Key Benefits of Reports

    • Benchmark BMI’s Independent 5-year Freight Transport Industry Forecasts on Venezuela to test other views – a key input for successful budgetary and planning in the strategic Venezuelan Freight Transport market.
    • Target Business Opportunities & Risks in the Venezuelan Freight Transport sector through our reviews of latest industry trends, regulatory changes and major deals, projects and investments in Venezuela.
    • Exploit the Latest Competitive Venezuelan Freight Transport intelligence & company SWOTS on your competitors and peers through company rankings by sales, market share and ownership structure – includes multi national and national companies in Venezuela.

Coverage

Executive Summary

Summary of BMI’s key industry forecasts, views and trend analysis covering Freight Transport and logistics, regulatory changes, major investments and projects, and significant multinational and national company developments.

SWOT Analysis

SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) analysis of the state’s business environment, transport sector, politics and economics, which carefully evaluates the short- and medium-term issues facing the industry.

Business Environment Rankings

BMI’s regional comparative analysis of the transport sector, evaluating sector-specific issues alongside the broader Country Risk context; including sector growth, political and economic stability, the competitive environment and trade volume expansion.

Industry Trends And Developments

Analysis of latest projects across the Freight Transport sector – road, rail, air, sea, logistics – including market overview which provides an outline of the key elements driving development.

BMI 5-Year Industry Forecast

Historic data series and 5-year forecasts to end-2012 for all key industry and macroeconomic indicators, supported by explicit assumptions, plus analysis of key downside risks to the main forecast, including:

  • Port freight total (tonnes mn); Seaborne freight (tonnes mn)
  • Riverborne freight (tonnes mn); Airport freight (tonnes mn)
  • Total traffic by mode (tonnes/km); Freight industry value (US$bn)
  • Contribution to GDP (%); Sector employment (‘000); Population growth (mn); Nominal GDP (US$bn); Real GDP growth (%)
  • Consumer price index (%y-o-y average); Total imports (US$bn) and exports (US$bn); Current account (US$bn); import and export value by goods category (US$bn, % of total), top trade destinations/ sources (US$bn, % of total).

Competitive Landscape & Profiles

Company profiles, including SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) analyses, fully researched senior executives and full contact details and business activity.

BMI's Executive Summary

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The Sector At A Glance

Key Insights On The Freight Transport Sector Of Venezuela

Venezuela and China would create a US$6bn fund to be used for investments in Venezuela, President Hugo Chávez said at the beginning of November. Part of the money was due to go into oil-related transport projects (including pipelines and tankers). Venezuela continues to ride an oil boom, and that is having a marked influence on the freight transport sector. Seeking to seize a nationalist, anti-US leadership role in the region, Chávez has turned his attention to a series of ambitious projects, designed to underpin the growth and diversification of the country’s hydrocarbons exports. Business Monitor International’s (BMI’s) new Venezuela Freight Transport Report details forecasts, however, that as strong oil and gas revenues begin to moderate, Venezuela’s total freight carried, measured in milliontonnes km, will grow at an average annual rate of 3.5% in 2007-2011, a little ahead of GDP growth which will average 3.2% over the same period. As a result, the total value of transport and communications will grow to reach US$20bn by the 2011, representing 9.3% of the country’s GDP.

We expect Venezuelan pipeline throughput to grow by an annual average of 4.0% in 2006-2010. While oil volume growth will moderate, the big developments will take place in natural gas. At present, there are chronic shortages of gas in western Venezuela, and the pipeline to Colombia will initially be used to bring in imports from that country. But Venezuela sits on the largest gas reserves, mainly located in the east of the country. President Chávez’s vision is that these can be used not only to cover the domestic deficit but also to reverse the flow, pumping gas to Colombia, and eventually to supply key South American nations such as Brazil and Argentina, through a continental pipeline. The initial aim is to boost natural gas production by 30% by 2008. In line with the president’s plans, in 2006 Venezuela joined Mercosur, the South American trade pact between Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay (with Bolivia as associate member).

Venezuela’s ambitious plans, which require massive investments over many years, might not survive sharply lower revenues, which could come within our forecast period. Second, significant political and business environment risks must be factored in. The Chávez presidency has been erratic, and its commitment to regional integration projects has tended to be politically-led (Venezuela recently left the Andean Pact because it disagreed with other members who were seeking free trade agreements (FTAs) with the US). As for the business environment for the freight industry, BMI gives Venezuela the lowest score among the major Latin American markets – 29 (out of a theoretical maximum of 70), well below the regional average of 38. The regulatory and competitive environments are particularly weak.

In fact, while oil and gas wealth underpins our Venezuelan freight transport forecasts, it is also true that given this advantage the freight industry could have done much better. In emerging economies, freight growth tends to run significantly ahead of GDP, but in Venezuela, on our projections, the gap will be only 0.3 percentage points on an annual average basis over the next five years. Pipeline throughput and sea cargo is largely driven by the oil sector. Rail freight will grow strongly because of mineral exports, but is developing from a very low base. Road haulage is held back by a failure to invest in the highway network. Airfreight growth is moderate to disappointing compared with neighbouring countries. The bottom line then, is that Venezuela’s freight industry can expect moderate, but below-potential growth over the next five years, and that it remains exposed to the risk of a sharper downturn in international oil prices.

Competitive Landscape for Latin America Freight Transport Reports: Sample of Companies Ranked

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Analysis of latest projects across the freight transport sector – road, rail, air, sea, logistics – including market overview which provides an outline of the key elements driving development. SWOT analysis of the state’s business environment, transport sector, politics and economics, which carefully evaluates the short- and medium-term issues facing the industry.

Network of Latin American Freight Transport Sources

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BMI's Latin American Freight Transport Reports are based on an extensive network of multilateral organisations, government departments, freight transport industry associations, chambers of commerce and company reports. Information sources include:

 

Read about our other Freight Transport Reports

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