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Outer Harbor channel widening at Flinders Port

by Jessica Dickers
January 23, 2018
in Civil Construction, News, Ports
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Flinders Port will start work to widen its Outer Harbour channel, removing 1.55 million cubic metres of material from the shipping channel and placing it 30km offshore.

That volume is approximately half the amount of material that was removed from Outer Harbor in the 2005 Channel Deepening project.

Flinders Port Holdings CEO, Vincent Tremaine, said that the project was essential to protecting the import and export industry that contributes so greatly to South Australia’s economy.

“The Flinders Adelaide Container Terminal is the only container terminal in South Australia. Without widening the channel to accommodate these new larger vessels, containerised trade and cruise shipping will omit Adelaide from their shipping calls,” Mr Tremaine said.

“This will be an economic disaster with exports decimated, imported products increasing in cost and major job losses both directly at the port but with far greater flow on impacts as businesses close, downsize or move interstate.

“For those businesses that survive the loss of container shipping, their containers will have to be moved by road or rail to and from Melbourne at a high cost both to the importers and exporters, but also to the environment. Hundreds of thousands of additional truck movements will be necessary.”

Currently, South Australia is the only capital city in Australia that does not have a port that can accommodate these larger ships.

In 2014, the port saw 37 ships exceed the design width of the channel.

In 2017, the number jumped to 312 and the ships continue to increase in size, demonstrating the need to be able to accommodate the rapidly increasing trend of Post Panamax sized vessels.

The port lodged the the development application in July 2017. 

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