Deepest container ship to sail from Port Chalmers
Deepest container ship to sail from Port
Chalmers
The departure of Maersk’s Southern Star
service vessel, Laust Maersk, today (Monday 29 February)
will be an especially significant one; at 13.5 metres draft
it will be the deepest container vessel to sail from New
Zealand waters since the first container ships started
arriving in Port Chalmers 35 years ago.
The sailing comes
only a few weeks after Port Otago completed the first stage
of its Next Generation harbour deepening programme, to 13.5
metres, allowing large container ships like the Laust Maersk
to make full use of the extra channel depth to carry more
cargo.
Thirteen and a half metres will be the deepest draft that any container ship has ever sailed from a New Zealand port and it continues Port Chalmers’ unique record of shipping firsts, dating back to 1882 with the first shipment of frozen meat to Europe.
Port Chalmers is already the deepest container port in New Zealand and there have been several sailings of vessels at 13 metres over the last two years.
“The fact that a shipping line is able to make use of the extra channel depth so quickly shows there is demand for ships to sail deeper from Port Chalmers as the last port on their New Zealand rotation”, said Geoff Plunket, Port Otago Chief Executive.
“Our new channel depth gives container
lines the flexibility to add more cargo and improve their
efficiency as they call down the coast because they can
arrive deeper at Port Chalmers and then sail deeper too,”
he added.
“This is a significant development as it allows for the larger size vessels Maersk Line currently deploys in the New Zealand market to be fully utilised. It’s only when our vessels are filled to capacity that we can start to create efficiencies across the entirely supply chain,” said Gerard Morrison, managing director of Maersk Line New Zealand.
Port Otago’s channel deepening is part of a suite of projects designed to prepare the port for the next generation of bigger ships on the New Zealand coast. It includes deepening the shipping channel to 14 metres, berth sheet-piling, construction of two new warehouses adding an additional 12,800m² to capacity and the purchase of a new tug and split-hopper barge.
These projects have a total cost of about $30 million.
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