According to indiashippingnews.com, Shri Sanjay Swarup, Chairman and Managing Director of Container Corporation of India Ltd. (CONCOR), outlined the company’s integrated strategy for green transition, digital modernization, and maritime expansion during his keynote address at the Maritime & Logistics Conclave 2026 in New Delhi on April 25, 2026.
Green Logistics Infrastructure
The source states that CONCOR has deployed 230 LNG-powered trucks, supported by in-house fueling facilities at Khatuwas and upcoming infrastructure at Dadri. This initiative is part of a broader green agenda, which includes a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with GAIL for joint development of LNG infrastructure. Further advancing decarbonization, CONCOR has begun inducting electric vehicles—including Rail Mounted Gantry (RMG)-based systems and electric trucks—aimed explicitly at reducing carbon emissions.
Digital Transformation in Terminal Operations
Shri Swarup emphasized digital transformation as a core enabler of efficiency. According to the report, CONCOR is integrating AI-based solutions in terminal operations and adopting advanced digital platforms to improve operational efficiency and promote ease of doing business. These efforts align with industry-wide trends toward data-driven decision-making and real-time visibility across intermodal nodes.
Maritime Expansion and Strategic Partnerships
In maritime logistics, CONCOR has launched its own shipping services using its proprietary containers, connecting India with the Middle East and other global markets. The source notes strategic MoUs for port and terminal development, as well as the formation of the Bharat Container Shipping Line (BCSL). These moves are intended to strengthen India’s sovereign capacity in global container shipping—a domain historically dominated by foreign carriers.
Industry Context and Practitioner Implications
CONCOR’s initiatives reflect a wider shift among national logistics champions: COSCO has expanded green port partnerships across Southeast Asia; Maersk’s dual-fuel vessel fleet now exceeds 100 vessels; and DHL’s 2025 sustainability roadmap targets 50% zero-emission last-mile delivery in 10 major cities. For supply chain professionals, this signals growing pressure—and opportunity—to standardize low-carbon transport procurement, integrate AI-enabled predictive analytics into multimodal planning, and assess vendor alignment with national maritime development frameworks like BCSL. As India accelerates inland container depot (ICD) modernization and coastal shipping incentives under the Sagarmala Programme, interoperability between rail, road, and port digital systems becomes operationally critical—not optional.
“These initiatives collectively reflect CONCOR’s vision to build a resilient, sustainable, and globally competitive logistics network aligned with India’s growth aspirations.” — Shri Sanjay Swarup, Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Ltd. (CONCOR)
Source: indiashippingnews.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










