Latest News – Page 1111

  • News

    PSA completes purchase of Hong Kong assets

    2005-04-01T00:00:00Z

    PSA International has completed the purchase of NWS Holdings Limited''s Hong Kong port assets. The deal represents PSA''s first investment in the world''s largest container port and involves the transfer of NWS Holdings'' equity stakes in Hong Kong''s Container Terminal No. 3 (CT3) and Container Terminal No. 8 (CT8) West ...

  • Yangshan: SIGP is concentrating on this for the time being
    News

    THE NEW KID IN TOWN

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    A new player, Shanghai International Port Group (SIPG), is quietly preparing to emerge onto the international terminal operator scene, writes James Macpherson.

  • Valencia has a multi-pronged plan to boost container handling capacity over the short to medium term
    News

    BOX BUILD-UP

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Valencia is getting to grips with the task of adding major new container capacity to meet strong demand, writes Mike Mundy

  • Technology developed to protect the military - such as this mini-ROV - can protect ports and harbours too
    News

    NAVAL TECHNOLOGY SHIELDS THE WATERFRONT

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Sophisticated electronics, signal processing, unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) and command and control technology developed for naval applications are all being used to makes ports and harbours safer, as David Foxwell writes.

  • News

    PORT CONGESTION: GONE OR JUST "SEASONALLY ADJUSTED"?

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Ben Hackett further explores the problem and concludes that poor planning is the culprit.

  • News

    Hard Choices

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Life is about making choices - some harder than others. And choices have consequences. But once a course has been chosen - right or wrong - then what is done is done and anyway it''s usually impossible to reverse back the way you''ve come.

  • The simplest way to get stuff onto the beach!
    News

    FROM DESTRUCTION TO RECONSTRUCTION

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Whatever your views on how contracts for the reconstruction of war-damaged port facilities are awarded, there is an undeniable need for such work to be carried out - usually in double-quick time. Furthermore, such emergency installation, repair, rehabilitation or reconstruction of critical elements of a country''s infrastructure must often be ...

  • Portal cranes working iron ore at Qinhuangdao
    News

    GETTING WORSE BEFORE IT GETS BETTER

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    China''s bulk and break-bulk handling facilities differ significantly from its container facilities in one crucial respect: with the country''s entrance to the WTO, its container terminals - both planned and existing - were deemed not to be of strategic national importance, thus paving the way for the introduction of foreign ...

  • Duerganckdok: over 7mTEU capacity on completion
    News

    BIG PLANS PREDICATED ON BUOYANT FORECASTS

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Both Rotterdam and Antwerp are investing heavily in much needed container capacity, but the struggle to convince government of the required urgency has been long and hard. Neil Madden reports.

  • Reliable high quality ropes the most striking item Newer cranes are more reliable in terms of improved calculation methods resulting in optimisation of selected components
    News

    I JUST SAT THERE THINKING. . .

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    When a reporter asked one of the returning astronauts what his secret thoughts had been immediately before the launch he said: " I just sat there thinking that this remarkable piece of hardware had 40,000 components, all of them supplied by the lowest bidder." Just how many crane operators have ...

  • News

    WHY'S AND HOW'S OF COMPONENT FAILURE

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    In a paper entitled ''Crane Modernisation - Why and How'', Tek Soon Chong, Jimmy Liang and Peter Darley of Singapore''s Portek, pick up on a number of useful component issues including that of spare part availability: " The heart of a container quay crane is the drive control system, " ...

  • The RMG: The future is here?
    News

    THE FUTURE SEEMS RAIL-MOUNTED

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The debate over the best pick of equipment with which to run a terminal yard - the straddle carrier, the rubber tyred gantry (RTG), or the rail mounted gantry (RMG) - has rumbled on for decades, and continues to, as Kevin Chinnery discovers.

  • A fender undergoing one of the many tests required for PIANC Type Approval
    News

    TYPE APPROVAL BRINGS SECTOR INTO LINE

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Fender testing and the procedure for reporting fender performance has been a hot topic for many years, ever since the almost universal adoption by consultants and other fender specifiers of the original PIANC testing guidelines back in 1984; but a major milestone was reached recently when the first manufacturer succeeded ...

  • News

    SHORTSEA MOTORWAYS OR MUDDLE?

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Whilst transport is a perennial problem for any government, handling the issue across 25 nations is bound to constitute a major headache. The European Commission has been struggling with transport issues since its inception but with freight on Europe''s roads increasing by around 60 billion t/km each year and one ...

  • News

    BATTLE FOR MERSEY DOCKS INTENSIFIES

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    BCT has ordered an additional ship-to-shore gantry crane, and has already started some infrastructure works in connection with the new quay. Peel Ports, owner of the Manchester Ship Canal and Clydeport Holdings, has made an approach which could lead to a £781m bid for Mersey Dock & Harbour Co (MDHC). ...

  • News

    Garston building for the future

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Associated British Ports (ABP) is to invest £ 750,000 in a new handling and distribution facility at Garston for a leading supplier to the UK construction industry, Maxit LWA Ltd formerly known as Optiroc U which started importing lightweight aggregates through Garston in 2002, and is seeking to expand its ...

  • News

    SEVILLE TO COMPETE WITH CADIZ

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    BCT has ordered an additional ship-to-shore gantry crane, and has already started some infrastructure works in connection with the new quay. The Chamber of Commerce of Seville is to seek a concessionaire to run its free zone once plans to expand the port are fully implemented. This will enable the ...

  • Kokkolas AWT: inspired by Amsterdams
    News

    Indoor operations in Finland's north

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The port of Kokkola has opened an all-weather terminal (AWT) designed to protect containers and general cargo as well as ships, crews and port workers, from the elements year round.

  • News

    VALENCIA TO BUILD NORTH QUAY

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    BCT has ordered an additional ship-to-shore gantry crane, and has already started some infrastructure works in connection with the new quay. Valencia Port Authority has issued a tender for the extension of the North Quay, which will gain 237 metres of linear quaywall, with alongside draught of 16 metres. The ...

  • News

    Backing for Thames wharves report

    2005-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Strong support for the new report by the Mayor of London on securing the future of Thames cargo-handling wharves has come from the Port of London Authority (PLA). The PLA welcomed the recommendations and agrees that it will help further strengthen the role of the Thames for the movement of ...