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  Shanghai now the world's largest cargo port   (Asia Pusle)  Updated: 2006-01-09 13:35  Deep-water port starts operation 
A deep-water port began operation at Yangshan Isles of Shanghai in 
mid-December. The Yangshan deep-water port, a mammoth facility 27.5 kilometers 
from Luchao port in Shanghai's Nanhui district, is expected to turn the east 
China metropolis into an international maritime shipping center. 
 The deep-water port is located in Shengsi county of Zhejiang province at the 
mouth of the Yangtze River, about 45 kilometers from Pudong international 
airport. The port is designed to have an annual handling capacity of 25 million 
TEUs when the entire project is completed in 2020. 
 The first phase of construction, completed in December, put into operation a 
1.6-kilometer hydraulic dock with five berths. By 2010, the dock will be 
extended to 11 kilometers with around 30 berths, port authorities told Xinhua. 
The launching of the port was praised by Vice Prime Minister Huang Ju as a 
"major breakthrough" in Shanghai's building of an international maritime 
shipping center. 
 Huang visited the port in December and proclaimed a formal start to its 
operations. At the launching ceremony, he urged relevant departments, provinces 
and cities to speed up port construction in line with the plans approved by the 
State Council so as to ease the country's transportation bottleneck and boost 
the steady and fast growth of the national economy. 
 "We should speed up construction of new ports in line with the long and 
medium-term plans approved by the State Council, and further tap the potentials 
of existing facilities, too," he said, adding, "it's important to take full 
advantage of the Yangtze waterway and better serve the socioeconomic development 
of the Yangtze River Delta, the Yangtze drainage areas and the entire country." 
 Though Shanghai's name literally means "on the sea", the main part of the 
city sits inland on the banks of the Huangpu River, which runs into the Yangtze, 
China's longest waterway. Heavy silting in the Yangtze Delta region has long 
prevented it from serving as a deep-water port. 
 The idea to transform Shanghai port into an international shipping center was 
initially proposed by the government in 1996, but since the port is only seven 
meters deep, a new site had to be located. An eight-square-kilometer bonded area 
at the port and the Yangshan Port Customs were also launched in mid-December. 
    
  
  
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