Port of Dalian
The Port of Dalian (38° 55' N 121° 41' E) founded in 1899 lies at the southern tip of Liaodong Peninsula in Liaoning province and is the most northern ice-free port in China. It is also the largest multi-purpose port in Northeast China serving the seaports North Asia, East Asia and the Pacific Rim. It is the trade gateway to the Pacific. It is the second largest container transshipment hub in mainland China.[1]
The Port of Dalian consists of Daliangang, Dalianwan, Xianglujiao, Nianyuwan, Ganjinzi, Heizuizi, Si'ergou and Dayaowan port areas. Port of Dalian is owned and managed by the state-owned Dalian Port Corporation Limited. It has established trading and shipping links with more than 300 ports in 160 countries and regions of the world. There are 68 international and domestic container shipping routes. Port of Dalian handles at least 100 million in cargo throughput annually. [1]
Geography
The Port of Dalian is located on the Yellow Sea at 38 °55′44″N and 121° 39′17″. The port covers a water area of 346 km² and a land area of nearly 15 km². There are 160 km of specialized railway lines, 300,000 m² of warehouses, 1.8million km² of stacking yards and over 1,000 units of different types of loading and discharging machinery and equipment.[1]
Port Infrastructure
The port has 80 modern berths in production. Out of the 80 berths, 38 are deep water berths for vessels of over 10,000 metric tons deadweight (DWT). The annual throughout was 64.17 million tons in 1995.[1]
See also
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