Wed 11 Aug 2010 09:16

Hambantota goes underwater in August


Hambantota harbour to be filled with water later this month.



Sri Lanka's Hambantota Harbour is due to be officially filled with water on August 15th, 2010, with President Mahinda Rajapaksa expected to attend as the chief guest.

Several thousand locals have visited the construction site of the Hambantota Harbour over the past few days to see it before water is filled behind the breakwater later this month.

The first vessel is due to arrive at Sri Lanka's new Hambantota Port during the month of November, less than two years after the port development project was initiated.

The China-financed project, which commenced on January 15th 2008 will be the deepest port in the Indian subcontinental region with a draft of 17 metres.

The first phase of the project, which was initially due to be completed by April 15th 2011, has proceeded ahead of schedule despite reports in September 2008 that the project was facing suspension due to a cash flow crisis when project managers China Harbour-Sinohydro Consortium issued a letter to Sri Lanka's Ports and Aviation Minister, Chamal Rajapaksa, demanding payment.

It is hoped that together with Colombo, Hambantota will become a leading port in the country. However, there are also fears that the port may not earn enough to help repay the Chinese loan if cargo volumes are not sufficiently high.

Lack of income could lead to the government requesting that shippers shift container handling from Colombo to Hambantota, which shipping firms may be reluctant to do if it is not economically viable.

Local sources have pointed out that Sri Lanka would not benefit financially from shifting business from Colombo to Hambantota. The country's economy only benefits if Hambantota generates new business.

The new bunkering terminal at Hambantota is expected to provide a major boost to the Sri Lankan bunker market. The terminal will be designed to handle up to 500,000 metric tonnes of oil products a year. Depending on the requirement the terminal can be further expanded up to one million metric tonnes.

Last year the Sri Lankan government confirmed that the country would receive a $US65 million loan from China's Exim Bank to build a bulk storage tank farm in Hambantota that will also be used to store marine fuel.

The new facility will supply and store marine fuel, aviation fuel and LP gas and provide bunkering services for vessels passing by Sri Lanka. It is expected to have a total storage capacity of 82,000 cubic metres.

Chart showing percentage of off-spec and on-spec samples by fuel type, according to VPS. Is your vessel fully protected from the dangers of poor-quality fuel? | Steve Bee, VPS  

Commercial Director highlights issues linked to purchasing fuel and testing quality against old marine fuel standards.

Ships at the Tecon container terminal at the Port of Suape, Brazil. GDE Marine targets Suape LSMGO by year-end  

Expansion plan revealed following '100% incident-free' first month of VLSFO deliveries.

Hercules Tanker Management and Hyundai Mipo Dockyard sign bunker vessel agreement Peninsula CEO seals deal to build LNG bunker vessel  

Agreement signed through shipping company Hercules Tanker Management.

Illustration of Kotug tugboat and the logos of Auramarine and Sanmar Shipyards. Auramarine supply system chosen for landmark methanol-fuelled tugs  

Vessels to enter into service in mid-2025.

A Maersk vessel, pictured from above. Rise in bunker costs hurts Maersk profit  

Shipper blames reroutings via Cape of Good Hope and fuel price increase.

Claus Bulch Klausen, CEO of Dan-Bunkering. Dan-Bunkering posts profit rise in 2023-24  

EBT climbs to $46.8m, whilst revenue dips from previous year's all-time high.

Chart showing percentage of fuel samples by ISO 8217 version, according to VPS. ISO 8217:2024 'a major step forward' | Steve Bee, VPS  

Revision of international marine fuel standard has addressed a number of the requirements associated with newer fuels, says Group Commercial Director.

Carsten Ladekjær, CEO of Glander International Bunkering. EBT down 45.8% for Glander International Bunkering  

CFO lauds 'resilience' as firm highlights decarbonization achievements over past year.

Anders Grønborg, CEO of KPI OceanConnect. KPI OceanConnect posts 59% drop in pre-tax profit  

Diminished earnings and revenue as sales volume rises by 1m tonnes.

Verde Marine Homepage Delta Energy's ARA team shifts to newly launched Verde Marine  

Physical supplier offering delivery of marine gasoil in the ARA region.


↑  Back to Top