Gopalpur port

Gopalpur port is a deep sea port of Gopalpur in Ganjam District, Odisha, India. The port has been developed on the banks of the Bay of Bengal. The seaport will increase the sea trade of Odisha, as well as industry and employment.[1][2]

Gopalpur port
Location
Country India
Coordinates21.12°N 86.25°E / 21.12; 86.25
Details
Opened23 May 2013
Operated byGopalpur ports Ltd
Owned byShapoorji Pallonji Ports Pvt. Ltd and Orissa Stevedores Ltd.
Type of harbourNatural harbor (sea port)
No. of berths3
Depth18.5 metres (61 ft)
CEOCapt. Sandeep Agarwal
Statistics
Website
http://www.gopalpurports.in/

Gopalpur port started its commercial operations in 2013 as an all-weather port, on a trial basis. Around 7,500 metric tonne of ilmenite, a sand mineral product of Orissa Sand Complex (OSCOM) division of Indian Rare Earths Limited(IREL) was shipped in a small vessel to South Korea.[3]

In December 2022, Petronet LNG Ltd, India's largest liquefied natural gas importer, will set up a floating LNG receipt facility at Gopalpur port in Odisha at Rs 2,306 crore.The company has signed an agreement with Gopalpur Ports Ltd for the facility that will have a capacity of about 4 million tonnes per annum, it said in a tweet. Gopalpur will be the third LNG terminal on the east coast.[4]

Harbor

The port harbor is natural and its depth is 18.5 meters. Mini cape vessels of over 100,000 DWT can be handled by the port. There are 3 jetties or berths in this port.

Transport

The port is connected to the Kolkata-Chennai railway line and National Highways. The port is connected by the 6 km long National Highway 59. The port is close to National Highway 16 (Kolkata-Chennai), providing good links with Gopalpur. The port is 160 km from Paradip Port and 260 km from Visakhapatnam.

K&R Rail Engineering, a hyderabad based firm has completed the railway track connection for the port.[5] GPL currently uses the siding of Indian Rare Earths Limited for its railway traffic; the siding is served by the station at Chhatrapur, the nearest large town is about 6 km away.[6]

References

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