Port of Bridgetown

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Port of Bridgetown
200px
Gatehouse for the Deep Water Harbour from the Princess Alice Highway. (c. November 2000)
Location
Country Barbados Barbados
Location Bridgetown, St. Michael
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Details
Opened 1961
Operated by Barbados Port, Inc.
Owned by Government of Barbados
Type of harbor Artificial
(Coastal Breakwater)[1]
Available berths 7[2]
Wharfs 0
Piers 0
Employees 592
Website
http://www.barbadosport.com/

The Port of Bridgetown (officially the Deep Water Harbour),[3] (AMS Seaport Code: 27201,[4][5] UN/LOCODE: BB BGI, Port Callsign: 8PB) is a seaport in Bridgetown on the southwest coast of Barbados.[6] Situated at the North-Western end of Carlisle Bay, the harbour handles all of the country's international bulk ship-based trade and commerce.[7] In addition to international-shipping the Deep Water Harbour is the port of entry for southern-Caribbean cruise ships.[8] The port is one of three designated ports of entry in Barbados, along with the privately owned Port Saint Charles marina and the Sir Grantley Adams International Airport. The port's timezone is GMT –4, and it handles roughly 700,000[9] cruise passengers and 900,000 tonnes of containerised cargo per year.

History

Construction of the Deep Water Harbour began in 1956 by Costain Group of Britain,[10] and cost EC$28,000,000 through completion in 1961.
The port was formed by creating a man-made isthmus across the shallow strait that existed off the coast of Fontabelle, St. Michael.
The isthmus formed 90 acres of new land stretching from the original west coast of Barbados, out to a small uninhabited, ex-quarantine island just offshore, named Pelican Island.
After the initial completion, the harbour later underwent a $22 million expansion seventeen years later.[3]

In 2002 Barbados Port Inc. contracted with Jan De Nul Group of Companies of Belgium to carry out dredging at the port facility. The dredging was deemed necessary to allow some of the world's largest cruise ships to berth in Barbados rather than anchoring offshore. The project followed a rigorous environmental monitoring programme by the Barbados Port Inc. along with key regulatory agencies, namely the Town Planning Department, the Coastal Zone Management Unit, the Environmental Engineering Division and the University of the West Indies' Natural Resources Management Programme to ensure that the oceanographic and sediment processes, the water quality, and the marine communities were not compromised in any way.[11] During this operation, the port's depth was increased to 11.6 metres (from 9.6 metres). Reclaimed material from the dredging was added to increase the port's cargo area by 9 acres.[12]

In December 2008, Minister of International Transport George Hutson announced that due to congestion between cargo and passenger ships at the Deep Water Harbour, the country needed to look at expansion at the facility following the last upgrade undertaken in 2002.[13] Due to the importance of Tourism to Barbados' economy, the government is presently reviewing a further $70 million upgrade.[14]

In September 2010, the Barbados government stated it was reviewing a list of joint-venture partners to construct the new cruise ship facilities at the port with expected construction to begin in 2011.[15]

Due to increased activity at the port, officials say it poised to become a "super-hub of the southern Caribbean", rivalling Puerto Rico.[16][17][18]

In 2012 the Government of Barbados announced [1] the desire to establish a new separate Cruise terminal just to south along the Princess Alice Highway.[2][3][4] As advisors to the Government, Royal Caribbean and STI were selected to work with the government [5][6] on the project to be called The Sugar Point Cruise Development[7]' or The Sugar Point Cruise Terminal. The facility will function as a means to separate cruise-traffic to the country from the containerised-traffic which will remain at the Deep Water Harbour. The move should help to mitigate delays which effect container-ships to Bridgetown which at times must have idle offshore for Cruise ships to make available a berth as cruise ships are given preference at the Harbour.[8] The first phase of the new terminal is expected to cost in the region of BDS$300 million, and dredge work is planned by the administration to begin in November 2012.[9][10]

Administration

Responsibility for administering the port is vested in the CEO of Barbados Port Incorporated (BPI). As a statutory corporation it oversees all matters affecting the efficient operations of the harbour facility. B.P.I. also advises the Ministry of International Business and International Transport who has ultimate authority for the Deep Water Harbour. Barbados Port Inc. is a member of: the American Association of Port Authorities,[19] the Caribbean Shipping Association (CSA),[20] the Port Management Association of the Caribbean (P.M.A.C.),[21][22] the Shipping Association of Barbados (SAB),[23] and an affiliate of the Caribbean Maritime Institute (CMI).[24]

It has been awarded the title of "Caribbean Port of the Year" for: 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998; the "Best Multi-Purpose Terminal (Container terminal)" in 2004 and 2005;[25] and the safest port in the Caribbean region in 2011.[26][27]

Shipping

File:Barbados Tugboat Photos (2).JPG
Tugboat Pelican II in Barbados.

Trade

Top trading partners:[28]

Imports: consumer goods, machinery, foodstuffs, construction materials, chemicals, fuel, electrical components

Top import sources (2009)
  • Trinidad and Tobago – 28.52%,
  • United States of America – 27.96%,
  • Colombia – 7.13%,
  • China – 4.76%,
  • United Kingdom – 4.39%

Exports: manufactures, sugar and molasses, cotton, rum, other foods and beverages, chemicals, light manufacturing, electrical components

Top export destinations (2009)
  • Trinidad and Tobago – 17.48%,
  • Jamaica – 15.63%,
  • United States of America – 8.93%,
  • Saint Lucia – 8.13%,
  • United Kingdom – 5.36%,
  • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines – 5.04%,
  • Antigua and Barbuda – 4.12%

Terminals

Terminal facilities
Berths Depth
(m)
Quay length
(m)
Area
(m²)
Notes
Breakwater 11.5 522 For Cruise vessels.
Sugar Berth 9.75 307 For Bulk sugar, molasses tankers.
(Cross) Berth #1 11 152 Naval, auxiliary vessels.
Berth #2 11.0 183 Cruise vessels, breakbulk vessels.
Berth #3 11.0 183 breakbulk, container vessels.
Berth #4 11.0 184 Container vessels.
Berth #5 11.0 65 Container vessels.
Shallow Draught 6.8 156 Inter-island cargo vessels (breakbulk)
Bulk Facility 9.75 183 Dry bulk vessels.
Esso Jetty 11.6 244 Petroleum tankers.
Needham’s Point 11.6 198 Petroleum tankers.
Oistins 10.0 172 Petroleum tankers.
Black Rock 7.5 122 Petroleum tankers.
Spring Garden 4.9 103 Petroleum tankers.

Passenger lines

The Deep-Water Harbour now acts as a home port for many of the British-based Cruise ship lines operating in the Caribbean region. Some of the Cruise Lines which visit or are home ported at the Deep Water Harbour include:[29]

Ships registry

Barbados has a small but increasing ships registry. The Barbados Maritime Ships Registry (BMSR) has seventy six (76) vessels flying the Barbados Flag.

See also

References

  1. Aerial photo of the Deep Water Harbour
  2. 2009 Statistics, PMAC
  3. 3.0 3.1 CHAPTER 67A DEEP WATER HARBOUR (EXPANSION AND IMPROVEMENT) - Prior expansion 1978
  4. Foreign Port Codes, Census.gov
  5. Foreign Port Codes, Page International - Port Codes
  6. "Port of Bridgetown" World Port Source, Port Detail
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  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Deep Water at Bridgetown - Film by Richard Costain Ltd British Film Institute, 1961
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. Barbados Port Inc: Cruise and Cargo Facilities
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  19. Corporate Members - Caribbean Ports, American Association of Port Authorities
  20. Barbados Port Inc., Caribbean Shipping Association
  21. About the Port Management Association of the Caribbean (P.M.A.C.)
  22. Barbados Port Inc., Port Management Association of the Caribbean, P.M.A.C.
  23. Shipping Association of Barbados - About us
  24. Caribbean Maritime Institute
  25. Awards, Caribbean Shipping Association
  26. Barbados port recognized as the safest in the Caribbean
  27. Good re port
  28. Barbados profile, CIA World factbook (Economy)
  29. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links