London Thamesport

London Thamesport from Gillingham over the River Medway estuary.

London Thamesport is a container seaport on the River Medway, serving the North Sea. It is located on the Isle of Grain, in the Medway unitary authority district of the English county of Kent. The area was formerly called Port Victoria.

History

Kent Oil Refinery

In 1953, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (later British Petroleum) developed a large oil refinery, Kent Oil Refinery, in the south of the Isle of Grain. A fuel depot with an attached port had existed there since 1928. From 1953,[1] over ten million tons of crude oil were processed annually on the 4 km2 (1.5 sq mi) site. This led to the establishment of the oil-fired power station at Grain and dual-fuel capable Kingsnorth. In practice, Kingsnorth uses coal. The refinery was closed on 27 August 1982,[2] and work was transferred to other BP locations. The plant was taken over by British Gas plc (at that time still state owned), which used a small part of the site for the storage of liquefied natural gas.[3] Three-quarters of the site remained unused.

Container port

In 1987 British Gas submitted plans to use 0.87 km2 (0.34 sq mi) of the disused refinery site as a Container port. Building began in 1989. The risk capital financing of the £150 million project, named Thamesport, took place through the operating company Thames Estuary Terminals Ltd., later Thamesport Ltd. By March 1990 the enterprise had a capacity of approximately 360,000 TEU per year.

Land access

Land access to Thamesport was at first only by road. In time the railway line from Gravesend to the Isle of Grain was to be used. A goods station with track and transshipment facilities was developed at Thamesport. A government subsidy of £1.8 million was received. It started operating in January 1992.

Ownership changes

By the first half of 1990, the repayment of c. £100 million risk capital put the operator company Thamesport Ltd. into administration. The investment group Rutland Partners LLP acquired 95% of MTS holdings Ltd – the parent company of Thamesport Ltd – in December 1995 for £25 million and took over debts of £27 million. With the new owner, the port was further developed. The capacity increased to approximately 635,000 TEU per year. In 1997, with a turnover of £27.3 million, a profit (before tax)of approximately £2.5 million was made. In February 1998 Rutland Partners LLP sold their interest in MTS holdings Ltd and small navigation company "Maritime Haulage" for £112 million to the Hutchison Whampoa Group. Hutchison Whampoa also operates two other important ports on the British east coast, Felixstowe and Harwich.

Deep-water port

In 2001 Thamesport was developed into a deep-water port. The harbour basin was dredged to a depth of at least 15.5 metres (8.5 ftm), and the approach to a minimum depth of 12.5 metres (6.8 ftm), at a cost of £3.5 million. In June 2008, its name was changed to London Thamesport.[4]

Facilities

The heart of Thamesport is a 655 metres (2,149 ft) deep water dock. The quay has eight (STS) gantry cranes, and can service vessels with draughts of 14.5 metres (48 ft). The temporary storage facility has capacity for 26,000 TEU; i.e. 13,000 standard containers. The container handling is semi-automatic, as the container tugs are manually operated. 635,000 TEU can be processed annually. In the long-term the capacity could be doubled.

Although site constraints limit the maximum possible length of the quay to only 750 metres (2,500 ft), there is considerable scope for future development at Thamesport. The majority of this brownfield site (a former oil refinery) remains undeveloped, and Thamesport Interchange has outline planning permission to build 5,000,000 square feet (465,000 m2) of logistics related facilities.[5] Immediately to the north of Thamesport is a terminal for the import of aviation fuel (kerosene). Thamesport will be well-placed if the plans for a new London Airport, either on the Isle of Grain itself, or on the Mayor of London's "Boris Island", come to fruition. (This is unlikely to be a consideration in anything other than the long-term future. In December 2013, the Airports Commission, chaired by Sir Howard Davies, excluded these proposals from its short-list of possible recommendations. The Commission later studied a number of aspects of the 'Inner Thames Estuary Proposal' and announced in July 2014 that it would not be adding any such proposal to its short-list.)

Land Traffic

Road

Thamesport is connected to national road network by the A228. This leads Stoke and Hoo to Strood, where it feeds into A2 towards London and the M2 motorway over the Medway Viaducts to Faversham where it rejoins the A2 which leads to Dover.

Rail

The port also has from a connection to the single-tracked, standard gauge, freight Hundred of Hoo Railway. Three British rail freight companies – English, Welsh & Scottish Railway, Fastline Freight and Freightliner – currently have container services to Thamesport.[6] In the first half of 2005 approximately 25% of traffic to and from Thamesport used the rail link.

References

  1. Richards, A. E. (1958). "New Type Platforming Catalyst Produced and Tested in Europe". Platinum Metals Review 2 (1). Retrieved 21 May 2008.
  2. "History This week in time". Where I Live Kent. BBC. Retrieved 21 May 2008.
  3. Belmore I.; Fuller D. E. (January–February 2004). "The Isle of Grain terminal – The return of LNG to the UK". LNG Journal. Maritime Content Ltd. p. 40-43. Retrieved 21 May 2008.
  4. www.thamesport.co.uk
  5. http://www.londonthamesport.co.uk/services/frmfuturedevelopment.aspx
  6. "Thamesport Celebrates Links to the UK's Capital": Press Release from Thamesport's owner, Hutchison Ports (UK) Limited, dated 19 June 2008

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to London Thamesport.

Coordinates: 51°26′25″N 0°41′15″E / 51.44028°N 0.68750°E