Container & Cargo Handling – Page 78

  • News

    Lion City port losing its roar

    2006-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Singapore has held on to the top box port crown for two years running, but can it hold off rival Hong Kong for a third? Peter Trevalyn thinks not

  • News

    Seaway offers alternative outlet

    2006-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Grain volumes shipped via the St Lawrence Seaway rose 25.5% in the first quarter ended June 30 to 3.36m tonnes, according to Richard Corfe, chief executive and president of the St Lawrence Seaway Management Corporation.

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    News

    Beating hurricane hangovers

    2006-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Hurricanes Katrina and Rita caused unprecedented human and financial damage along the Gulf coast of the US last year. As this year''s season gets underway, Michael King examines how the grain ports are gearing up for this season''s onslaught

  • Automation often begins quayside, as with these quay cranes
    News

    Cautious curiosity

    2006-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Questions are being asked, but many ports are still not serious about building facilities to support automation, reports David Foxwell

  • An RTG at Port of Long Beach lifts a container
    News

    In-built intelligence key to successful automation

    2006-09-01T00:00:00Z

    With shipping lines demanding higher productivity and reduced handling costs, terminals that don''t have the ability to implement new technology are less likely to be able to provide efficiency improvements, as David Foxwell reports

  • News

    Speed up, tone down and save time

    2006-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Users such as Ceres Paragon Terminals say automation and a high specification TOS has a number of benefits. Ceres Paragon claims to operate the fastest container terminal in the world, and will be the first marine terminal to integrate IT systems provided by Navis with image acquisition portals, weigh-in-motion scales, ...

  • Land-hungry cars are eating up space at European terminals
    News

    Space: the final frontier

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Ports handling vehicles are finding more inventive ways to store cars, moving up rather than out. But authorities still find themselves juggling the needs of containers against cars, reports Felicity Landon

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    News

    Moving up a gear

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    With many car manufacturers facing tough times, it''s no surprise that this filters through the supply chain, leading to significant pressure on port and stevedore rates. Felicity Landon finds out what the customers want - and how the ports are working to deliver it What must ports provide for their ...

  • News

    So what do customers want?

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Simon Bird, chief executive, Bristol Port Company: ''The ships need fast and efficient turnround. They want to be in and out. We have to provide 24/7 service and 99 times out of 100 we give them labour on arrival.

  • News

    Driving beyond traditional port services

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    For Europe''s leading vehicle handling ports, loading and unloading units and watching over car parks is only a part of the equation.

  • The worlds largest container ship, China Shipping Container Lines 9,600 teu Xin Los Angeles, was delivered to Lloyds Register class in July. But 12,000 teu-plus ships are already under construction
    News

    Breaking box boundaries

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    The next big jump in containership design is imminent, so what are the implications for containerports, asks Mike Mundy 19No it''s not going to stop - the 10,000 teu barrier will well and truly be broken in the near future, containerships will continue to get bigger and ports will have ...

  • ICTSI still aims to reach 4% growth this year, despite a 6% drop in the first quarter
    News

    Midas touch misses Manila

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Lower first quarter throughput figures belie ICTSI''s success outside of the Philippines. Is it time to return to base? Peter Trevalyn investigates

  • The black stuff has got European ports hot under the collar
    News

    Full steam ahead

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Booming German coal imports are being hotly chased by ports in the know, as mainland Europe powers ahead with generation plant developments. Mike King sees what all the fuss is about

  • News

    Burning desire to win power plant business

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Plans to construct a series of new coal-fired power plants in Dutch ports are creating huge interest among terminal operators.

  • Kalmars DCF 410 has a capacity of 41 tonnes on the spreader; other models in the range can handle 36-45 tonnes
    News

    Heavy lifters won't over-reach themselves

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Reachstackers may well be the preferred choice for container handling in the European ports market, but heavy duty container handling FLTs continue to be in demand, where the situation suits their use, as David Foxwell explains

  • The two main selling points of second-hand equipment sales are cost reduction and the provision of a quick fix There are various levels of service available within secondhand equipment supply right through from just the core transaction itself t...
    News

    Look beyond the second-hand stigma

    2006-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Experience shows that used equipment can provide an efficient and timely alternative to new units, and the service base is more sophisticated than you might think

  • The new unit is a bespoke design machine tailored to Tees particular needs
    News

    Mobile power

    2006-06-01T00:00:00Z

    The addition of a new bespoke design mobile has significantly enhanced steel slab handling operations at Tees Port

  • Tilbury - a tailormade solution for Stora Enso from vessel discharge to warehousing and despatch The Enterprise Distribution Centre in the background Inside the warehouse - supply chain strategy dominates
    News

    Paper Mate

    2006-06-01T00:00:00Z

    The deployment of supply chain expertise in the set-up and operation of the Port of Tilbury''s Enterprise Distribution Centre has proved a decisive factor in its success

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    News

    Reach stackers: six big questions

    2006-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Steve Cameron put six critical questions to reach stacker producers and users. The answers supplied offer major assistance to identifying the right machine at the right price

  • Picton, New Zealand, where the port saved a significant sum by installing automated mooring technology rather than extend the berths, as would have been necessary if conventional mooring lines were used
    News

    Modelling for safer solutions

    2006-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Mooring ships can be dangerous. Every year thousands of terminal and ship staff are injured in mooring line accidents, and in some cases, the accidents can be fatal. David Foxwell reports on the risks and how to mitigate them.