An expanded
container terminal at Fujairah Port was inaugurated on Sunday 6 June after an investment of Dh1 billion ($272m)
A number of new structures
have been added at the terminal operated by Abu Dhabi Ports to boost its
cargo-handling capacity and accommodate larger vessels, according to officials.
The completion of
the expansion works, which began three years ago, will increase the terminal’s
general cargo throughput to 1.3 million tonnes and container capacity to
720,000 twenty-foot equivalent units, or TEUs.
The size of the container terminal has been expanded to 110,000 square
metres
The size of the
container terminal has been expanded to 110,000 square metres, with a further
25,000-square-metre multipurpose area also added to handle general cargo and
roll-on, roll-off, or Ro-Ro, items, according to state news agency Wam.
The work also
involved extending the quay wall from 760 metres to 1,000 metres while the
approach was deepened from 12 metres to 15 metres to allow the port to handle
larger vessels.
Sheikh Mohammed
bin Hamad Al Sharqi, Crown Prince of Fujairah, opened the expanded port
terminal 6 June.
“The emirate of
Fujairah has become a leading international maritime transport centre …
enabling it to attract investment and support the national sustainable
development process,” said Sheikh Mohammed.
Fujairah Port is strategically important
. It is located 70
nautical miles from the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway carrying a fifth of
the world’s traded oil.
“Over the past few
years, we have invested heavily in several development projects aimed at
increasing not just the terminal’s cargo-handling capacity but its ability to
handle specific types of cargo as well,” said Abdulaziz Al Balooshi, chief
executive of Fujairah Terminals.
“These investments
have had an enormous impact on general cargo capacity, increasing what we can
handle by more than a million tonnes.”
Abu Dhabi Ports is
expanding the terminal after a 35-year concession agreement was reached with
Fujairah Ports in 2017.
As part of the
deal, the two entities set up Fujairah Terminals, a new operational arm wholly
owned by Abu Dhabi Ports, to boost existing infrastructure and handle all
general container cargo, Ro-Ro items and cruise ships at the port.
“As the UAE’s only
multipurpose port on the eastern coast, Fujairah is well placed to become a GCC
trade hub linking the flow of commerce between the Indian subcontinent, the Red
Sea and East Africa,” said Saif Al Mazrouei, head of the ports cluster at Abu
Dhabi Ports during an online media briefing about the port’s expansion.
“Considering all
our new innovations and infrastructure improvements to date, today we can say
that Fujairah Terminals’ transformational journey in becoming a global
facilitator of trade and logistics is truly under way.”
The terminal to have the capacity to handle 100 vessels
The terminal will
have the capacity to handle at least 100 vessels annually, up from 60 last
year, he said.
The cruise
business in Fujairah is expected to resume during the third quarter after
services were disrupted due to Covid-19, officials said.