Port of Gdańsk
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Port of Gdańsk | |
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![]() A view of the Port of Gdańsk (2021) | |
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Location | |
Country | Poland |
Location | Gdańsk |
Coordinates | 54°23′36″N 18°40′12″E / 54.39333°N 18.67000°E |
UN/LOCODE | PLGDN[1] |
Details | |
Operated by | Gdańsk Seaport Authority |
Owned by | Government of Poland |
Size of harbour | 412.56 ha (1,019.5 acres) |
Land area | 653 ha (1,610 acres) |
Size | 1,065.56 ha (2,633.1 acres) |
Statistics | |
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Passenger traffic | ![]() |
Website Port of Gdańsk |
The Port of Gdańsk is a Polish seaport located on the southern coast of Gdańsk Bay in the city of Gdańsk, extending along the Vistula estuary Martwa Wisła (Dead Vistula), Port Channel and Kashubia Canal. It is one of the largest seaports on the Baltic Sea.
The Port of Gdańsk is divided into two parts, the Inner and Exterior Port.
Inner Port
[edit]- Port of Gdańsk Cargo Logistics S.A. - universal port operator providing handling and storage services for bulk and general cargo
- Gdańsk Container Terminal – providing feeder services
- Ferry terminals
- Polferries
- Westerplatte
- Phosphates terminal
- Liquid and bulk sulphur terminal
- Fruit handling terminal in the Port Free Zone
The Port of Gdańsk has specialized cargo handling equipment and port infrastructure, enabling among others the handling of grain, fertilizers, lumber, ore, steel and containers, as well as ro-ro vessel servicing.
Exterior — Northern Port
[edit]Northern Port is located directly in the water basins of Gdańsk Bay. The largest vessels with a capacity of up to 300,000 tonnes deadweight (DWT) and draft to 15 m that enter the Baltic Sea can be serviced here.
- Baltic Hub Container Terminal
- Coal terminal
- Naftoport — crude oil, heating oils, fuels terminal
- LPG terminal
Baltic Hub Container Terminal
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The Baltic Hub Container Terminal 54°22′56″N 18°42′44″E / 54.382321°N 18.712282°E (previously Deepwater Container Terminal) is located in the northern port. It was officially opened on 1 October 2007 and is the largest container terminal in Poland. It also serves as a transshipment hub for Saint Petersburg and other ports in the Baltic Sea region.[citation needed] Currently the handling capacity of the container terminal amounts to 3,000,000 TEU with prospect to further increase by 250,000 TEU due to conversion of additional storage area as well as container handling equipment purchase.[citation needed]
The terminal has become a springboard for the Polish Maritime Economy. In 2011, some of the largest container ships in the world at that time, the 14,700-TEU capacity Mærsk E-class container ships began regular weekly calls in Gdańsk. These included Evelyn Maersk, Emma Maersk, Eleonora Maersk, Ebba Maersk and Eugen Maersk.[citation needed] DCT Gdańsk reached its first one millionth handling in June 2011. July 2011 saw the implementation of E-SMART, a modern tool by the British company International Terminal Solutions Ltd (ITS). Maersk were the first container line which to introduce direct navigational connection (AE10) from the Far East to the Baltic region.
Sea connectivity
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2025) |
- Maersk Line AE10 Asia–Europe–Asia (Kwangyang – Ningbo – Shanghai – Yantian – Tanjung Pelepas – Suez Canal – Rotterdam – Bremerhaven– Gdansk – Aarhus – Gothenburg – Bremerhaven – Rotterdam – Algeciras – Suez Canal – Yantian – Kwangyang)
- Gdansk Finnish Gulf Service (Gdansk – Kotka – Helsinki – Gdansk)
- Gdansk – St. Petersburg Service (Gdansk – St. Petersburg – Gdansk)
- OOCL line LL1 Asia-North Europe Loop1 (Shanghai - Ningbo - Xiamen - Yantian - Singapore - Felixstowe - Zeebrugge - Gdansk - Wilhelmshaven - Piraeus) [3]
Container throughput
[edit]- 2007 - 4,423 twenty-foot equivalent unit (TEU)
- 2008 - 106,469 TEU
- 2009 - 162,189 TEU
- 2010 - 451,730 TEU
- 2011 - 634,871 TEU
- 2012 - 896,962 TEU
- 2013 - 1,150,887 TEU
- 2014 - 1,188,380 TEU
- 2015 - 1,069,705 TEU
- 2016 - 1,289,842 TEU
- 2017 - 1,593,761 TEU
Statistics
[edit]Year | Cargo tons[2] | Containers TEU[2] | Containers tons[2] | Passengers[2] |
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2010 | ![]() |
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2011 | ![]() |
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2012 | ![]() |
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2013 | ![]() |
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2014 | ![]() |
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2015 | ![]() |
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2016 | ![]() |
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2017 | ![]() |
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2018 | ![]() |
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2019 | ![]() |
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2020 | ![]() |
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2021 | ![]() |
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2022 | ![]() |
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2023 | ![]() |
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Gallery
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Entrance to the Inner Port
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Port of Gdańsk from mainmast of Fryderyk Chopin
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Car carrier in the entrance to the inner port, as seen from the nearby beach
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Industrial landscape of the Gdańsk Shipyard
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "UNLOCODE (Pl) - POLAND". service.unece.org. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Facts and figures". Port of Gdansk. Retrieved 2024-03-10.
- ^ "OOCL".
- ^ Container throughput statistics, dctgdansk.pl