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Port of Kolkata

Port of Kolkata or Kolkata Port, officially known as Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port (formerly Kolkata Port Trust or Port of Calcutta), is the only riverine major port of India,[15] located in the city of Kolkata, West Bengal, around 203 kilometres (126 mi) from the sea.[16] It is the oldest operating port in India[17] and was constructed by the British East India Company.[18] Kolkata is a freshwater port with no variation in salinity.[19] The port has two distinct dock systems — Kolkata Dock at Kolkata and a deep water dock at Haldia Dock Complex, Haldia.

Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port, Kolkata
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
Location
Country India
LocationKolkata, West Bengal, India
Coordinates22°32′46″N 88°18′53″E / 22.54611°N 88.31472°E / 22.54611; 88.31472
UN/LOCODEINCCU[1]
Details
Opened1870; 153 years ago (1870)
Operated bySyama Prasad Mukherjee Port Authority
Owned bySyama Prasad Mukherjee Port Authority, Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, Government of India
Type of harbourCoastal breakwater, riverine, large seaport
Size4,500 acres[2]
No. of berths34 (Kolkata)[3]
17 (Haldia)[4]
No. of wharfs86
Employees3,600[2]
Official nameSyama Prasad Mukherjee Port
Main tradesAutomobiles, motorcycles and general industrial cargo including iron ore, granite, coal, fertilizers, petroleum products, and containers
Major exports: Iron ore, leather, cotton textiles
Major imports: Wheat, raw cotton, machinery, iron & steel
Stacking area134722 sqm
Statistics
Vessel arrivals3670 (2017–18)[5][6]
Annual cargo tonnage65.66 million tonnes(2022–23)[7]
Annual container volume8,44,762 (2019–20)[8][9]TEUs[10]
Passenger traffic20,396 (2016–17)[11]
Annual revenue2,919 crore (US$370 million) (2022–23)[12][13]
Net income304 crore (US$38 million) (2022–23)[14]
Website
www.kolkataporttrust.gov.in

In the 19th century, the Kolkata Port was the premier port in British India. After slavery was abolished in 1833, there was a high demand for labourers on sugar cane plantations in the British Empire. From 1838 to 1917, the British used this port to ship off over half a million Indians from all over India — mostly from the Hindi Belt (especially Bhojpur and Awadh) — and take them to places across the world, such as Mauritius, Fiji, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Suriname, and other Caribbean islands as indentured labourers. There are millions of Indo-Mauritians, Indo-Fijians, and Indo-Caribbean people in the world today.

After independence, the port's importance decreased because of factors including the Partition of Bengal (1947), reduction in the size of the port hinterland, and economic stagnation in eastern India.

It has a vast hinterland comprising the entire North East of India including West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Assam, North East Hill States and two landlocked neighbouring countries namely, Nepal and Bhutan and also the Autonomous Region of Tibet (China). With the turn of the 21st century, the volume of throughput has again started increasing steadily. As of March 2018, the port is capable of processing annually 650,000 containers, mostly from Nepal, Bhutan, and India's northeastern states.[18]

History edit

 
Emblem from 1870 to 2021
 
The Old Fort, the Playhouse, Holwell's Monument from Views of Calcutta

In the early 16th century, the Portuguese first used the present location of the port to anchor their ships, since they found the upper reaches of the Hooghly river, beyond Kolkata, unsafe for navigation. Job Charnock, an employee and administrator of the British East India Company, is believed to have founded a trading post at the site in 1690. Since the area was situated on the river with jungle on three sides, it was considered safe from enemy invasion. After the abolition of slavery in the British Empire in 1833, this port was used to ship lakhs of Indians as 'indentured labourers' to far-flung territories throughout the Empire.[20]

After slavery was abolished in 1833, there was a high demand for labourers on sugar cane plantations in the British Empire. From 1838 to 1917, the British used this port to ship off over half a million Indians from all over India — mostly from the Hindi Belt (especially Bhojpur and Awadh) — and take them to places across the world, such as Mauritius, Fiji, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Suriname, and other Caribbean islands as indentured labourers. There are millions of Indo-Mauritians, Indo-Fijians, and Indo-Caribbean people in the world today.

As Kolkata grew in size and importance, merchants in the city demanded the setting up of a port trust in 1863. The colonial government formed a River Trust in 1866, but it soon failed, and administration was again taken up by the government. Finally, in 1870, the Calcutta Port Act (Act V of 1870) was passed, creating the offices of Calcutta Port Commissioners. In 1869 and 1870, eight jetties were built on the Strand. A wet dock was set up at Khidirpur in 1892. The Khidirpur Dock II was completed in 1902. As cargo traffic at the port grew, so did the requirement of more kerosene, leading to the building of a petroleum wharf at Budge Budge in 1896. In 1925, the Garden Reach jetty was added to accommodate greater cargo traffic. A new dock, named King George's Dock, was commissioned in 1928 (it was renamed Netaji Subhash Dock in 1973).[20]

 
View of the Calcutta port in 1852

Though the port was conceived to be a commercial port and gateway of eastern India, the port played a very important role in the Second World War. It was bombed[21] twice by the Japanese forces. After independence, the Commissioners for the Port of Kolkata were responsible for the port till January 1975 when Major Port Trusts Act, 1963, came into force. The port is now run by a board of trustees having representatives from the Government, Trade Bodies, various Port Users, Labour Unions and some nominated members. On 12 January 2020, the port was renamed to Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the occasion of 150 years of operation of Kolkata Port at Netaji Indoor Stadium.[22]

 
An image of the old port of Kolkata.

The port is part of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road that runs from the Chinese coast via the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean, there to the Upper Adriatic region of Trieste with its rail connections to Central and Eastern Europe.[23][24][25]

Terminals edit

Dock systems edit

The Kolkata Port Trust (KoPT) manages two separate dock agglomerations, the Kolkata Dock System (KDS) and the Haldia Dock Complex (HDC).

Kolkata Dock System edit

 
Kidderpore Dry Dock, c. 1905
 
Khidirpore Dock of Syama Prasad Mukherjee Port Trust
 
A Ship in Hoogly River at the Port of Kolkata
 
Clock Tower Kidderpore Dock
 
Indenture Memorial, Kidderepore

It is situated on the left bank of the Hooghly River at about 203 km (126 mi) upstream from the sea. The pilotage station is at Gasper/ Saugor roads, 145 Kilometres to the south of the KDS (around 58 km from the sea). The system consists of:[26]

Apart from this, there are around 80 major riverine jetties, and many minor jetties, and a large number of ship breaking berths.

Haldia Dock Complex edit

It is situated at around 60 kilometres (37 mi) away from the pilotage station. The complex consists of:

  • Impounded Dock. System with 12 Berths
  • 3 Oil Jetties in the River
  • 3 Barge Jetties in the River for handling Oil carried by Barges.
  • Haldia Anchorage for lash vessels.

All the docks are impounded dock systems with locks from river.

Dry Dock edit

KoPT has the largest dry dock facility in India . These dry docks cater to the diverse repair and maintenance needs of the vessels calling on the Eastern Ports of India. In addition, shipbuilding facilities are also available in these dry docks. All the dry docks are inside the impounded dock system. There are five dry docks of which three are in Kidderpore Dock and two are in Netaji Subhas Dock.[16]

Dry Docks of Kolkata Port Trust
Dock Dry Dock Number Size
Netaji Subhas Dock 1 172.21 metres (565.0 ft) x 22.86 metres (75.0 ft)
Netaji Subhas Dock 2 172.21 metres (565.0 ft) x 22.86 metres (75.0 ft)
Kidderpore Dock 1 160.02 metres (525.0 ft) x 19.5 metres (64 ft)
Kidderpore Dock 2 142.95 metres (469.0 ft) x 19.5 metres (64 ft)
Kidderpore Dock 3 102.1 metres (335 ft) x 14.63 metres (48.0 ft)

There is a fully-fledged repair workshop including Diesel Engine Overhauling Unit, Structural Shop, Heavy and Light Machine Shop, Forging Shop, Electrical Shop and a Chain Testing/Repair Shop with 2500 KN capacity Tensile Compression Testing Machine to support various activities in the dry dock.

Pilotage edit

Due to the constraints of the river (like silting, sandbars etc.) no seagoing vessel above 200 GT is allowed to navigate without a qualified pilot of the Kolkata Port Trust. The total pilotage distance to KDS is 221 kilometres (137 mi), comprising 148 kilometres (92 mi) in river and 75 kilometres (47 mi) in sea, and for HDC is 121 kilometres (75 mi), comprising 46 kilometres (29 mi) in river and 75 kilometres (47 mi) in sea.

Navigational Aids edit

Lighthouse edit
  • Sagar Lighthouse is situated at Middleton Point on the Sagar Island 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) inshore. It is visible from a distance of 28 kilometres (17 mi) in clear weather.[16]
  • Dariapur Lighthouse is situated on the right bank of Hooghly River south of Rasulpur river and about 2.7 kilometres (1.7 mi) inshore. It is visible from a distance of 35 kilometres (22 mi) in clear weather.[16]
Light Vessels edit
  • There are four unmanned light vessels to aid in navigation.
  • U.G.L.F. located at
  • L.G.L.F. located at
  • Talent WK L.V. located at
  • Eastern Channel L.V. located at
Automatic Tide Gauges edit

These are maintained at Tribeni, Garden Reach, Diamond Harbour and Haldia for round-the-clock recording of tidal data, which is used for the prediction of tides and preparation of tide tables by Survey of India.

Semaphores edit

These are maintained at Akra, Moyapur, Hooghly Point, Balari, Gangra and Sagar for displaying rises of tide for the convenience of various vessels navigating, dredging and surveying in the River Hooghly. The semaphores used to display the tide level at these localities on a mast by the position of the meter and decimeter arms which were manually rotated with the rise and fall of every decimeter of tidal level. However these semaphores are no longer functional and instead, tidal levels are broadcast over VHF radio every half an hour from all the above stations except at Balari.

River Marks and Buoys edit

A total of 500 (of which 140 are lighted) River Marks and Buoys are maintained by the KoPT. These are extremely useful in facilitating night navigation, pilotage and dredging. These lights are operated either by grid electricity, by battery or by dissolved Marine Acetylene Gas. There is also 1 boat buoy, 30 lighted buoys and 72 unlit buoys marking the navigational channel from Sandheads to Kolkata. It has one of the longest navigational channels in the world.

Differential Global Positioning System edit

In the wide estuary, position fixing with reference to shore objects to be viewed from the deck of a vessel, is very difficult. In 1983 KoPT introduced the Electronic Position Fixing System "Syledis" for position fixing of the vessels plying in the wide estuary of the Hooghly river. The shore-based Syledis Position Fixing System was functioning round the clock with the help of the Syledis Stations located at Haldia, Raichak, Dadanpatra Bar and Frazergunj. The system was effectively utilized for the purpose of hydrographic survey and dredging. KoPT has now replaced the Syledis Position Fixing System by Differential GPS (Differential Global Position Fixing System). This latest state-of the art technology provides improved location accuracy of up to 10 cm.

Satellite ports edit

Connections edit

Kolkata Dock System Railway (KDS Railway) edit

KDS Railway was set up to cater to the traffic needs for docks, warehouses in the vicinity and various public and private sidings located around the Kolkata docks system. It works as a terminal agent of Indian Railways and operationally under Sealdah Division of Eastern Railway. KDS Rly has a working Agreement with Eastern Railway and render services to the users on behalf of them. Though KDS railway initially had many interfaces with Eastern Railway/South Eastern Railway and covered a wide range of area including Chitpur, Shalimar, and Garden Reach, at present its operation is truncated in the dock area only with the sole marshalling yard at East Dock Junction (EJC). The total track length of KDS railway is about 18 km (11 mi).[27]

It is connected with Eastern Railway through the Majerhat railway station. Indian Railways bring traffic for KDS through full fledged goods trains (rakes) in the East Dock Junction (EJC), by their locomotives. Thereafter KDS railway, after necessary documentation and certain mechanical work, place the trains in the respective handling points (inside docks or private sidings), in full or installments as per operational feasibility. After completion of loading/unloading operation at Sheds/Docks/sidings etc, the rakes are hauled out and outward  trains are formed at the marshalling yard (EJC). Again, after documentation, the outward rakes are dispatched by the locomotives provided by Eastern Railway.[27]

Statistics edit

In the fiscal year 2013–14, Port of Kolkata handled 41.386 million metric tons (45.620 million short tons) of cargo. This is significantly less than 53.143 million metric tons (58.580 million short tons) of cargo it handled in 2005–06. However, the number of vessels handled at Kolkata Port during 2013–2014 was the highest among all Indian Major Ports. KoPT handled 17.1% of the total number of vessels, which worked at Indian Major Ports in 2011–2012; significant improvement over 2011-12 which was 16%. During the fiscal year 2011–2012, 3183 vessels called at KoPT.[28]

The average turn around time per vessel was 4.18 days for Kolkata Dock System and 3.37 for Haldia Dock Complex.[29][30]

Operational Indicators of Port of Kolkata[11][29][31][32]
Category 2014–15 2013–14 2012–13 2011–12 Unit
Containers (number) 630,094 562,020 600,426 552,241
Import Cargo 36.25 27.42 27.02 27.97 million metric tonnes
Export Cargo 10.05 13.96 12.91 15.28 million metric tonnes
Passenger Traffic 39,552 42,514 40,349 52,239
Number of Ships Handled 3,230 3,225 N/A N/A
Financial Indicators of Port of Kolkata[29]
Category 2014–15 2013–14 2012–13 2011–12 2010–11
Operating Income 1,867.69 crore (US$230 million) 1,896.14 crore (US$240 million) 1,402.20 crore (US$180 million) 1,693.19 crore (US$210 million) 1,607.20 crore (US$200 million)
Operating Expenditure 1,936.13 crore (US$240 million) 1,966.37 crore (US$250 million) 1,700.42 crore (US$210 million) 1,554.95 crore (US$190 million) 1,463.15 crore (US$180 million)
Net Surplus −68.46 crore (US$−8.6 million) −70.23 crore (US$−8.8 million) −298.22 crore (US$−37 million) 138.24 crore (US$17 million) 144.05 crore (US$18 million)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "UN/LOCODE (IN) India". www.unece.org. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Kolkata Port Trust to lease area as big as London Docklands". www.livemint.com. 26 February 2020. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
  3. ^ "BERTH PARTICULARS". Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  4. ^ "Terminals". Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  5. ^ "Top ports record marginal upswing in FY19 cargo handling at 699 MT". economictimes.indiatimes.com. 7 April 2019. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  6. ^ "Kolkata Port Trust - Cargo Statistics". Kolkata Port Trust. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  7. ^ "Kolkata Port achieves all-time high cargo ( 65.66 MT) handling in 2022-23". www.indiablooms.com. India Blooms News Service. Retrieved 14 April 2023.
  8. ^ "SYAMA PRASAD MOOKERJEE PORT (SMP), KOLKATA ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT FOR THE YEAR 2019-2020". Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  9. ^ "Containers handled at major ports up 8% at 9.876 million TEUs in FY19". Business Line. 3 April 2019. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  10. ^ "India's major ports see 6.7 percent growth in container volumes". JOC.co. 7 April 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  11. ^ a b "Passenger Traffic at Kolkata Port". Kolkata Port Trust. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  12. ^ Ishita Ayan Dutt (4 April 2023). "Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port, India's oldest, posts highest cargo, surplus". www.business-standard.com. Kolkata: Business Standard. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  13. ^ "Calcutta Port Trust posts 26% surplus hike". www.telegraphindia.com. 12 April 2021. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  14. ^ "লাভের অঙ্ক বাড়ল হলদিয়া বন্দরের". www.anandabazar.com (in Bengali). Haldia: Anandabazar Patrika. 6 April 2023. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  15. ^ . archive.india.gov.in. Archived from the original on 1 July 2016. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  16. ^ a b c d . Calcutta Port Trust. Archived from the original on 13 March 2007. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  17. ^ Bhattacharya, Snigdhendu (5 May 2017). "Close to 150 years, country's oldest port staring at threats from proposed ports in Odisha and Bengal". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  18. ^ a b Acharya, Shangkar (10 March 2018). "Kolkata Port plans upgrade to stave off competition". Kathmandu Post. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  19. ^ "Kolkata Port Trust renamed after Syama Prasad Mukherjee, announces PM Modi". The Times Of India. 12 January 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  20. ^ a b "Explained: The significance of the Kolkata port, renamed by PM Modi". The Indian Express. 13 January 2020. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  21. ^ "76 years of Japanese bombing in Kolkata: How World War II almost destroyed the city". The Financial Express. 20 December 2018. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  22. ^ ""Kolkata Port Trust Renamed As Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port": PM Modi". NDTV.com. 12 January 2020. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  23. ^ Kolkata - lone Indian link in China's mega Maritime Silk Road
  24. ^ The Great Maritime Game
  25. ^ India’s Take on China’s Silk Road: Ambivalence With Lurking Worries
  26. ^ "Kolkata Dock System (KDS)".
  27. ^ a b "Railway Facilities - Syama Prasad Mookherjee Port Trust, Kolkata". Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  28. ^ . Kolkata Port Trust. Archived from the original on 5 September 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  29. ^ a b c "Administrative Report 2014-15". Kolkata Port Trust. 2015. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
  30. ^ "Kolkata Port Trust - Performance Indicators". Kolkata Port Trust. Archived from the original on 11 February 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  31. ^ . Kolkata Port Trust. Archived from the original on 4 December 2013. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  32. ^ . Kolkata Port Trust. Archived from the original on 17 December 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2014.

External links edit

    port, kolkata, kolkata, port, redirects, here, constituency, kolkata, port, vidhan, sabha, constituency, kolkata, port, officially, known, syama, prasad, mookerjee, port, formerly, kolkata, port, trust, port, calcutta, only, riverine, major, port, india, locat. Kolkata Port redirects here For the constituency see Kolkata Port Vidhan Sabha constituency Port of Kolkata or Kolkata Port officially known as Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port formerly Kolkata Port Trust or Port of Calcutta is the only riverine major port of India 15 located in the city of Kolkata West Bengal around 203 kilometres 126 mi from the sea 16 It is the oldest operating port in India 17 and was constructed by the British East India Company 18 Kolkata is a freshwater port with no variation in salinity 19 The port has two distinct dock systems Kolkata Dock at Kolkata and a deep water dock at Haldia Dock Complex Haldia Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port KolkataClick on the map for a fullscreen viewLocationCountryIndiaLocationKolkata West Bengal IndiaCoordinates22 32 46 N 88 18 53 E 22 54611 N 88 31472 E 22 54611 88 31472UN LOCODEINCCU 1 DetailsOpened1870 153 years ago 1870 Operated bySyama Prasad Mukherjee Port AuthorityOwned bySyama Prasad Mukherjee Port Authority Ministry of Ports Shipping and Waterways Government of IndiaType of harbourCoastal breakwater riverine large seaportSize4 500 acres 2 No of berths34 Kolkata 3 17 Haldia 4 No of wharfs86Employees3 600 2 Official nameSyama Prasad Mukherjee PortMain tradesAutomobiles motorcycles and general industrial cargo including iron ore granite coal fertilizers petroleum products and containersMajor exports Iron ore leather cotton textilesMajor imports Wheat raw cotton machinery iron amp steelStacking area134722 sqmStatisticsVessel arrivals3670 2017 18 5 6 Annual cargo tonnage65 66 million tonnes 2022 23 7 Annual container volume8 44 762 2019 20 8 9 TEUs 10 Passenger traffic20 396 2016 17 11 Annual revenue 2 919 crore US 370 million 2022 23 12 13 Net income 304 crore US 38 million 2022 23 14 Websitewww wbr kolkataporttrust wbr gov wbr inIn the 19th century the Kolkata Port was the premier port in British India After slavery was abolished in 1833 there was a high demand for labourers on sugar cane plantations in the British Empire From 1838 to 1917 the British used this port to ship off over half a million Indians from all over India mostly from the Hindi Belt especially Bhojpur and Awadh and take them to places across the world such as Mauritius Fiji South Africa Trinidad and Tobago Guyana Suriname and other Caribbean islands as indentured labourers There are millions of Indo Mauritians Indo Fijians and Indo Caribbean people in the world today After independence the port s importance decreased because of factors including the Partition of Bengal 1947 reduction in the size of the port hinterland and economic stagnation in eastern India It has a vast hinterland comprising the entire North East of India including West Bengal Bihar Jharkhand Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Assam North East Hill States and two landlocked neighbouring countries namely Nepal and Bhutan and also the Autonomous Region of Tibet China With the turn of the 21st century the volume of throughput has again started increasing steadily As of March 2018 the port is capable of processing annually 650 000 containers mostly from Nepal Bhutan and India s northeastern states 18 Contents 1 History 2 Terminals 2 1 Dock systems 2 1 1 Kolkata Dock System 2 1 2 Haldia Dock Complex 2 1 3 Dry Dock 2 1 4 Pilotage 2 1 5 Navigational Aids 2 1 5 1 Lighthouse 2 1 5 2 Light Vessels 2 1 5 3 Automatic Tide Gauges 2 1 5 4 Semaphores 2 1 5 5 River Marks and Buoys 2 1 5 6 Differential Global Positioning System 3 Satellite ports 4 Connections 4 1 Kolkata Dock System Railway KDS Railway 5 Statistics 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Emblem from 1870 to 2021 nbsp The Old Fort the Playhouse Holwell s Monument from Views of CalcuttaIn the early 16th century the Portuguese first used the present location of the port to anchor their ships since they found the upper reaches of the Hooghly river beyond Kolkata unsafe for navigation Job Charnock an employee and administrator of the British East India Company is believed to have founded a trading post at the site in 1690 Since the area was situated on the river with jungle on three sides it was considered safe from enemy invasion After the abolition of slavery in the British Empire in 1833 this port was used to ship lakhs of Indians as indentured labourers to far flung territories throughout the Empire 20 After slavery was abolished in 1833 there was a high demand for labourers on sugar cane plantations in the British Empire From 1838 to 1917 the British used this port to ship off over half a million Indians from all over India mostly from the Hindi Belt especially Bhojpur and Awadh and take them to places across the world such as Mauritius Fiji South Africa Trinidad and Tobago Guyana Suriname and other Caribbean islands as indentured labourers There are millions of Indo Mauritians Indo Fijians and Indo Caribbean people in the world today As Kolkata grew in size and importance merchants in the city demanded the setting up of a port trust in 1863 The colonial government formed a River Trust in 1866 but it soon failed and administration was again taken up by the government Finally in 1870 the Calcutta Port Act Act V of 1870 was passed creating the offices of Calcutta Port Commissioners In 1869 and 1870 eight jetties were built on the Strand A wet dock was set up at Khidirpur in 1892 The Khidirpur Dock II was completed in 1902 As cargo traffic at the port grew so did the requirement of more kerosene leading to the building of a petroleum wharf at Budge Budge in 1896 In 1925 the Garden Reach jetty was added to accommodate greater cargo traffic A new dock named King George s Dock was commissioned in 1928 it was renamed Netaji Subhash Dock in 1973 20 nbsp View of the Calcutta port in 1852Though the port was conceived to be a commercial port and gateway of eastern India the port played a very important role in the Second World War It was bombed 21 twice by the Japanese forces After independence the Commissioners for the Port of Kolkata were responsible for the port till January 1975 when Major Port Trusts Act 1963 came into force The port is now run by a board of trustees having representatives from the Government Trade Bodies various Port Users Labour Unions and some nominated members On 12 January 2020 the port was renamed to Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the occasion of 150 years of operation of Kolkata Port at Netaji Indoor Stadium 22 nbsp An image of the old port of Kolkata The port is part of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road that runs from the Chinese coast via the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean there to the Upper Adriatic region of Trieste with its rail connections to Central and Eastern Europe 23 24 25 Terminals editDock systems edit The Kolkata Port Trust KoPT manages two separate dock agglomerations the Kolkata Dock System KDS and the Haldia Dock Complex HDC Kolkata Dock System edit nbsp Kidderpore Dry Dock c 1905 nbsp Khidirpore Dock of Syama Prasad Mukherjee Port Trust nbsp A Ship in Hoogly River at the Port of Kolkata nbsp Clock Tower Kidderpore Dock nbsp Indenture Memorial KiddereporeIt is situated on the left bank of the Hooghly River at about 203 km 126 mi upstream from the sea The pilotage station is at Gasper Saugor roads 145 Kilometres to the south of the KDS around 58 km from the sea The system consists of 26 Kidderpore Docks K P Docks 18 Berths 6 Buoys Moorings and 3 Dry Docks Netaji Subhas Docks N S Docks 10 Berths 2 Buoys Moorings and 2 Dry Docks Budge Budge River Moorings 6 Petroleum Wharves Anchorages Diamond Harbour Saugor Road SandheadsApart from this there are around 80 major riverine jetties and many minor jetties and a large number of ship breaking berths Haldia Dock Complex edit Main article Haldia Port It is situated at around 60 kilometres 37 mi away from the pilotage station The complex consists of Impounded Dock System with 12 Berths 3 Oil Jetties in the River 3 Barge Jetties in the River for handling Oil carried by Barges Haldia Anchorage for lash vessels All the docks are impounded dock systems with locks from river Dry Dock edit KoPT has the largest dry dock facility in India These dry docks cater to the diverse repair and maintenance needs of the vessels calling on the Eastern Ports of India In addition shipbuilding facilities are also available in these dry docks All the dry docks are inside the impounded dock system There are five dry docks of which three are in Kidderpore Dock and two are in Netaji Subhas Dock 16 Dry Docks of Kolkata Port Trust Dock Dry Dock Number SizeNetaji Subhas Dock 1 172 21 metres 565 0 ft x 22 86 metres 75 0 ft Netaji Subhas Dock 2 172 21 metres 565 0 ft x 22 86 metres 75 0 ft Kidderpore Dock 1 160 02 metres 525 0 ft x 19 5 metres 64 ft Kidderpore Dock 2 142 95 metres 469 0 ft x 19 5 metres 64 ft Kidderpore Dock 3 102 1 metres 335 ft x 14 63 metres 48 0 ft There is a fully fledged repair workshop including Diesel Engine Overhauling Unit Structural Shop Heavy and Light Machine Shop Forging Shop Electrical Shop and a Chain Testing Repair Shop with 2500 KN capacity Tensile Compression Testing Machine to support various activities in the dry dock Pilotage edit Due to the constraints of the river like silting sandbars etc no seagoing vessel above 200 GT is allowed to navigate without a qualified pilot of the Kolkata Port Trust The total pilotage distance to KDS is 221 kilometres 137 mi comprising 148 kilometres 92 mi in river and 75 kilometres 47 mi in sea and for HDC is 121 kilometres 75 mi comprising 46 kilometres 29 mi in river and 75 kilometres 47 mi in sea Navigational Aids edit Lighthouse edit Sagar Lighthouse is situated at Middleton Point on the Sagar Island 1 5 kilometres 0 93 mi inshore It is visible from a distance of 28 kilometres 17 mi in clear weather 16 Dariapur Lighthouse is situated on the right bank of Hooghly River south of Rasulpur river and about 2 7 kilometres 1 7 mi inshore It is visible from a distance of 35 kilometres 22 mi in clear weather 16 Light Vessels edit There are four unmanned light vessels to aid in navigation U G L F located at L G L F located at Talent WK L V located at Eastern Channel L V located atAutomatic Tide Gauges edit These are maintained at Tribeni Garden Reach Diamond Harbour and Haldia for round the clock recording of tidal data which is used for the prediction of tides and preparation of tide tables by Survey of India Semaphores edit These are maintained at Akra Moyapur Hooghly Point Balari Gangra and Sagar for displaying rises of tide for the convenience of various vessels navigating dredging and surveying in the River Hooghly The semaphores used to display the tide level at these localities on a mast by the position of the meter and decimeter arms which were manually rotated with the rise and fall of every decimeter of tidal level However these semaphores are no longer functional and instead tidal levels are broadcast over VHF radio every half an hour from all the above stations except at Balari River Marks and Buoys edit A total of 500 of which 140 are lighted River Marks and Buoys are maintained by the KoPT These are extremely useful in facilitating night navigation pilotage and dredging These lights are operated either by grid electricity by battery or by dissolved Marine Acetylene Gas There is also 1 boat buoy 30 lighted buoys and 72 unlit buoys marking the navigational channel from Sandheads to Kolkata It has one of the longest navigational channels in the world Differential Global Positioning System edit In the wide estuary position fixing with reference to shore objects to be viewed from the deck of a vessel is very difficult In 1983 KoPT introduced the Electronic Position Fixing System Syledis for position fixing of the vessels plying in the wide estuary of the Hooghly river The shore based Syledis Position Fixing System was functioning round the clock with the help of the Syledis Stations located at Haldia Raichak Dadanpatra Bar and Frazergunj The system was effectively utilized for the purpose of hydrographic survey and dredging KoPT has now replaced the Syledis Position Fixing System by Differential GPS Differential Global Position Fixing System This latest state of the art technology provides improved location accuracy of up to 10 cm Satellite ports editMain article Haldia PortConnections editKolkata Dock System Railway KDS Railway edit KDS Railway was set up to cater to the traffic needs for docks warehouses in the vicinity and various public and private sidings located around the Kolkata docks system It works as a terminal agent of Indian Railways and operationally under Sealdah Division of Eastern Railway KDS Rly has a working Agreement with Eastern Railway and render services to the users on behalf of them Though KDS railway initially had many interfaces with Eastern Railway South Eastern Railway and covered a wide range of area including Chitpur Shalimar and Garden Reach at present its operation is truncated in the dock area only with the sole marshalling yard at East Dock Junction EJC The total track length of KDS railway is about 18 km 11 mi 27 It is connected with Eastern Railway through the Majerhat railway station Indian Railways bring traffic for KDS through full fledged goods trains rakes in the East Dock Junction EJC by their locomotives Thereafter KDS railway after necessary documentation and certain mechanical work place the trains in the respective handling points inside docks or private sidings in full or installments as per operational feasibility After completion of loading unloading operation at Sheds Docks sidings etc the rakes are hauled out and outward trains are formed at the marshalling yard EJC Again after documentation the outward rakes are dispatched by the locomotives provided by Eastern Railway 27 Statistics editIn the fiscal year 2013 14 Port of Kolkata handled 41 386 million metric tons 45 620 million short tons of cargo This is significantly less than 53 143 million metric tons 58 580 million short tons of cargo it handled in 2005 06 However the number of vessels handled at Kolkata Port during 2013 2014 was the highest among all Indian Major Ports KoPT handled 17 1 of the total number of vessels which worked at Indian Major Ports in 2011 2012 significant improvement over 2011 12 which was 16 During the fiscal year 2011 2012 3183 vessels called at KoPT 28 The average turn around time per vessel was 4 18 days for Kolkata Dock System and 3 37 for Haldia Dock Complex 29 30 Operational Indicators of Port of Kolkata 11 29 31 32 Category 2014 15 2013 14 2012 13 2011 12 UnitContainers number 630 094 562 020 600 426 552 241Import Cargo 36 25 27 42 27 02 27 97 million metric tonnesExport Cargo 10 05 13 96 12 91 15 28 million metric tonnesPassenger Traffic 39 552 42 514 40 349 52 239Number of Ships Handled 3 230 3 225 N A N AFinancial Indicators of Port of Kolkata 29 Category 2014 15 2013 14 2012 13 2011 12 2010 11Operating Income 1 867 69 crore US 230 million 1 896 14 crore US 240 million 1 402 20 crore US 180 million 1 693 19 crore US 210 million 1 607 20 crore US 200 million Operating Expenditure 1 936 13 crore US 240 million 1 966 37 crore US 250 million 1 700 42 crore US 210 million 1 554 95 crore US 190 million 1 463 15 crore US 180 million Net Surplus 68 46 crore US 8 6 million 70 23 crore US 8 8 million 298 22 crore US 37 million 138 24 crore US 17 million 144 05 crore US 18 million See also editFarakka Port Ports in India Ports in West Bengal Sagar Port Tajpur PortPortals nbsp Transport nbsp Engineering nbsp IndiaReferences edit UN LOCODE IN India www unece org Retrieved 11 September 2020 a b Kolkata Port Trust to lease area as big as London Docklands www livemint com 26 February 2020 Retrieved 29 February 2020 BERTH PARTICULARS Retrieved 21 December 2021 Terminals Retrieved 21 December 2021 Top ports record marginal upswing in FY19 cargo handling at 699 MT economictimes indiatimes com 7 April 2019 Retrieved 7 January 2020 Kolkata Port Trust Cargo Statistics Kolkata Port Trust Retrieved 13 June 2017 Kolkata Port achieves all time high cargo 65 66 MT handling in 2022 23 www indiablooms com India Blooms News Service Retrieved 14 April 2023 SYAMA PRASAD MOOKERJEE PORT SMP KOLKATA ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT FOR THE YEAR 2019 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2021 Containers handled at major ports up 8 at 9 876 million TEUs in FY19 Business Line 3 April 2019 Retrieved 7 January 2020 India s major ports see 6 7 percent growth in container volumes JOC co 7 April 2015 Retrieved 27 June 2015 a b Passenger Traffic at Kolkata Port Kolkata Port Trust Retrieved 18 January 2019 Ishita Ayan Dutt 4 April 2023 Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port India s oldest posts highest cargo surplus www business standard com Kolkata Business Standard Retrieved 16 April 2023 Calcutta Port Trust posts 26 surplus hike www telegraphindia com 12 April 2021 Retrieved 25 April 2021 ল ভ র অঙ ক ব ড ল হলদ য বন দর র www anandabazar com in Bengali Haldia Anandabazar Patrika 6 April 2023 Retrieved 16 April 2023 Business Portal of India Infrastructure National Level Infrastructure Maritime Transport Ports archive india gov in Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 16 June 2020 a b c d Calcutta Port Trust Brief History Calcutta Port Trust Archived from the original on 13 March 2007 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Bhattacharya Snigdhendu 5 May 2017 Close to 150 years country s oldest port staring at threats from proposed ports in Odisha and Bengal Hindustan Times Retrieved 4 April 2018 a b Acharya Shangkar 10 March 2018 Kolkata Port plans upgrade to stave off competition Kathmandu Post Retrieved 4 April 2018 Kolkata Port Trust renamed after Syama Prasad Mukherjee announces PM Modi The Times Of India 12 January 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2020 a b Explained The significance of the Kolkata port renamed by PM Modi The Indian Express 13 January 2020 Retrieved 16 June 2020 76 years of Japanese bombing in Kolkata How World War II almost destroyed the city The Financial Express 20 December 2018 Retrieved 16 June 2020 Kolkata Port Trust Renamed As Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port PM Modi NDTV com 12 January 2020 Retrieved 12 January 2020 Kolkata lone Indian link in China s mega Maritime Silk Road The Great Maritime Game India s Take on China s Silk Road Ambivalence With Lurking Worries Kolkata Dock System KDS a b Railway Facilities Syama Prasad Mookherjee Port Trust Kolkata Retrieved 9 November 2021 Kolkata Port Trust Cargo Statistics Kolkata Port Trust Archived from the original on 5 September 2013 Retrieved 17 December 2014 a b c Administrative Report 2014 15 Kolkata Port Trust 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2016 Kolkata Port Trust Performance Indicators Kolkata Port Trust Archived from the original on 11 February 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Kolkata Port Trust Container Statistics Kolkata Port Trust Archived from the original on 4 December 2013 Retrieved 11 February 2013 TRAFFIC HANDLED AT KOLKATA PORT Kolkata Port Trust Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Port of Kolkata Kolkata Port Trust Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Port of Kolkata amp oldid 1191659006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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