China has 34 major ports and more than 2000 minor ports. The former are mostly sea ports (except for ports such as Shanghai, Nanjing and Jiujiang along the Yangtze and Guangzhou in the Pearl River delta) opening up to the Yellow Sea (Bo Hai), Taiwan Strait, Pearl River and South China Sea while the latter comprise ports that lie along the major and minor rivers of China.[1] Most of China's major cities are also ports or are facilitated by a port nearby.[2]
Major ports
editThe major ports in China, listed North to South, consist of:[1]
1. Dalian 2. Yingkou 3. Jinzhou 4. Qinhuangdao 5. Tianjin 6. Yantai 7. Weihai 8. Qingdao 9. Rizhao 10. Lianyungang 11. Nantong 12. Zhenjiang 13. Jiangyin 14. Nanjing 15. Shanghai 16. Ningbo 17. Zhoushan 18. Jiujiang 19. Taizhou (North of Wenzhou) 20. Wenzhou 21. Taizhou (South of Wenzhou) 22. Changle 23. Quanzhou 24. Xiamen 25. Shantou 26. Jieyang 27. Guangzhou 28. Zhuhai 29. Shenzhen 30. Zhanjiang 31. Beihai 32. Fangchenggang 33. Haikou 34. Basuo
Port construction and cargoes
editChina's coastal ports enable the transportation of coal, containers, imported iron ore, and grain; roll-on-roll-off operations between mainland and islands; and deep-water access to the sea.
In port construction, China has especially strengthened the container transport system, concentrating on the construction of a group of deep-water container wharves at Dalian, Tianjin, Qingdao, Shanghai, Ningbo, Xiamen and Shenzhen, and thus laying the foundations for China's container hubs. A new deep-water port has opened in Yangshan southeast of Shanghai.
The coal transportation system has been further strengthened with the construction of a number of coal transport wharves. In addition, wharves handling crude oil and iron ore imports have been reconstructed or expanded.
At the end of 2004, China's coastal ports had over 2,500 berths of medium size or above, of which 650 were 10,000-ton-class berths; their handling capacity was 61.5 million standard containers for the year, ranking first in the world. Freight volumes handled by some large ports exceed 100 million tons a year; and the Shanghai, Shenzhen, Qingdao, Tianjin, Guangzhou, Xiamen, Ningbo and Dalian have been listed among the world's top 50 container ports..
130 of China's 2,000 ports are open to foreign ships. The major ports,[citation needed] including river ports accessible by ocean-going ships, are Beihai, Dalian, Dandong, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, Haikou, Hankou, Huangpu, Jiujiang, Lianyungang, Nanjing, Nantong, Ningbo, Qingdao, Qinhuangdao, Rizhao, Sanya, Shanghai, Shantou, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Weihai, Wenzhou, Xiamen, Yangzhou, Yantai, and Zhanjiang.
By province
editJiangxi
editFujian
editGuangdong
edit- Port of Guangzhou
- Port of Shenzhen
- Port of Shantou
- Port of Zhanjiang
- Shunde Port
- Rongqi Port
- Gaolan Port
Hainan
editHebei
editHong Kong
edit[neutrality is disputed]
Jiangsu
editLiaoning
editMacau
edit[neutrality is disputed]
Shandong
editShanghai
editTianjin
editZhejiang
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Ports in China". fujitrading.co.jp. Fuji trading. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
- ^ "China - Economy". Washington post. 8 September 2016. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
- China Factfile > Transport, Post and Telecommunications :Ports
- List of ports in China Sorted by province.
- Marine News China Information/News on Chinese Ports.