Port Metro Vancouver
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General information | |||
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Founded | Amalgamation January 1, 2008 | ||
Former authorities prior to amalgamation | - Port of Vancouver - North Fraser Port Authority - Fraser River Port Authority | ||
Coordinates - Latitude - Longitude |
(for former Port of Vancouver) 49°16'37" N 123°07'15" W | ||
Area - Coastline - Land - Water |
600 kilometres Unknown Unknown | ||
Major marine terminals | 28, including automobile (2), breakbulk (2), bulk (19), containers (4) and cruise (2) | ||
Foreign vessel calls | 3,116[1] | ||
Annual container volume | 2.8 million TEU[1] | ||
Annual cargo tonnage | 135 million metric revenue tons[1] | ||
Value of cargo handled | More than $75 billion CAD[1] | ||
Cruise traffic | 898,473 passengers 256 sailings[1] | ||
Direct Gross Domestic Product (GDP) | $10.5 billion CAD (estimated)[2] | ||
Jobs | 129,500 in Canada 47,700 direct jobs in B.C.[2] | ||
VFPA Board of Directors[3] | |||
Chair | Craig Neeser | ||
Other board members | Marcella Szel Anne Bancroft-Jones Robert James Carwell Tim Chapman Eugene Kwan Paul Landry Tom Longworth Penny Priddy T. Richard Turner | ||
President and CEO | Robin Silvester | ||
Official Website |
Port Metro Vancouver (legally Vancouver Fraser Port Authority)[4] is a non-shareholder, financially self-sufficient corporation established by the Government of Canada in January 2008, pursuant to the Canada Marine Act, and accountable to the federal Minister of Transport. It is the principal authority for shipping and port-related land and sea use in the Metro Vancouver region. In 2010, it was the largest port by tonnage in Canada, the fourth largest in North America and the fifth largest in the Americas.[5]
History
Prior to merger
Prior to the formation of the new authority, there were three separate port authorities in the Metro Vancouver region: the Port of Vancouver, which was the largest port in Canada; the Fraser River Port Authority; and the North Fraser Port Authority.
Although the ports were financially self-sufficient, the federal legislation governing the authorities generated some inefficiency because the port authorities, legally separate entities, were forced to compete with each other economically for business. This inefficiency came to the attention of the local media in 2006 when it was found that the recently expanded Fraser Surrey Docks, operated by the Fraser River Port Authority in New Westminster, were sitting idle after their principal shipping partner, CP Ships, relocated to the Port of Vancouver, already nearing capacity.[6] Some critics opposed the possible merger as they felt the new authority would not recognize the unique concerns of the Fraser River.[7]
To increase the efficiency of the ports of Metro Vancouver, the federal Minister of Transport permitted the three authorities to study the benefits of amalgamating in June 2006. The resulting report highlighted several benefits of amalgamation, and on June 16, Transport Canada granted a "certificate of intent to amalgamate port authorities". On December 21, 2007, the government of Canada published a certificate of amalgamation that allowed the three port authorities to merge into one effective January 1, 2008.[8]
Since 2013, Vancouver Fraser Port Authority also merged with Canada Place Corporation, which formerly operated Canada Place as a subsidiary of Port of Vancouver.[9]
Major initiatives
Container Capacity Improvement Program
The Container Capacity Improvement Program (CCIP) is the port's long-term strategy to meet anticipated growth in container traffic, which is expected to triple by the year 2030. The program consists of projects that both improve the efficiency of existing infrastructure and explore opportunities to build new infrastructure as demand rises. CCIP projects include the Deltaport Terminal Road and Rail Improvement Project (DTRRIP) and the proposed Roberts Bank Terminal 2 project.[10]
DTTRIP will result in infrastructure upgrades that would increase Deltaport's container capacity by 600,000 TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent units), within the terminal's existing footprint. The Roberts Bank Terminal 2 project is a proposed marine container terminal that could provide an additional capacity of 2.4 million TEUs per year to meet forecasted demand until 2030.[11]
North Shore Trade Area projects include:
- Western Level Lower Level Route Extension
- Pemberton Avenue Grade Separation
- Low Level Road Realignment[12]
- Neptune/Cargill Grade Separation
- Brooksbank Avenue Underpass[13]
- Lynn Creek Rail Bridge Addition [13]
South Shore Trade Area projects include:
- Powell Street Grade Separation
- Stewart Street/Victoria Overpass
Business sectors
Port Metro Vancouver offers 28 deep-sea and domestic marine terminals that service five business sectors: automobiles, break-bulk, bulk, containers, and cruise.
Terminals and facilities
Automobile terminals
- Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics
- Fraser Wharves (ceased operations at end of 2013)
Break-bulk terminals
- Fraser Surrey Docks
- Lynnterm East Gate and West Gate
Bulk terminals
- Alliance Grain Terminal
- Canexus Chemicals
- Cargill
- Cascadia
- Fibreco
- Ioco
- Kinder Morgan Vancouver Wharves
- Kinder Morgan Westridge
- Lantic Inc.
- Neptune Bulk Terminals
- Pacific Coast Terminals
- Pacific Elevators
- Petro-Canada
- Richardson International
- Robert's Bank Coal Terminals
- Shellburn
- Stanovan
- Univar Canada Terminal
- West Coast Reduction
- Westshore Terminals
Container terminals
- Centerm
- Deltaport
- Fraser Surrey Docks
- Vanterm
Cruise terminals
- Ballantyne Pier (ceased cruise operations at end of 2014 [14])
- Canada Place
References
- 1 2 3 4 5
- 1 2 2008 PMV Economic Impact Study
- ↑ Port Metro Vancouver. Port Metro Vancouver (2013-09-16). Retrieved on 2014-04-12.
- ↑ Port Metro Vancouver
- ↑ American Association of Port Authorities - World Port Rankings (2010)
- ↑ Container docks in Surrey idle after $190m expansion - The Vancouver Sun
- ↑ Port authorities set to amalgamate - Delta Optimist
- ↑ About Us - Port Metro Vancouver
- ↑ Canada Place Corporation
- ↑
- ↑ http://www.delta-optimist.com/Deadline+feedback+drawing+near/7599707/story.html
- ↑ Port Metro Vancouver. Port Metro Vancouver. Retrieved on 2014-04-12.
- 1 2 Port Metro Vancouver. Port Metro Vancouver (2011-03-29). Retrieved on 2014-04-12.
- ↑ http://www.seatrade-cruise.com/news/news-headlines/vancouver-eyes-strong-season-the-last-for-ballantyne-as-cruise-moves-to-canada-place.html
External links
- International Shipping in British Columbia
- Chamber of Shipping (BC): BC Ports handbook (pdf, 258 p.)
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