Sunday, June 29, 2025
Home Most Popular Port Gdańsk signs a grant agreement worth nearly US$106 million

Port Gdańsk signs a grant agreement worth nearly US$106 million

The Port Authority of Gdańsk signed a grant agreement for the project: “Improving the Port of Gdańsk infrastructure and analysing the implementation of a low-carbon OPS system for the sustainable development of the TEN-T network.”

Port of Gdańsk Authority has received approximately US$106 million in funding from the Connecting Europe Facility for the implementation of this project for the period 2021-2027. Also, the project is set to run from 2023 to 2027.

The investment involves the renovation of four quays in the Inner Port area: the Wiślane, Bytomskie, Rudowe III and Węglowe quays, totalling 1,916 meters in length, as well as the necessary underground and railway infrastructure. Tender procedures are now being issued to identify contractors for the building of these quays.

In addition, the project calls for the creation of an “Analysis of the Implementation of the Onshore Ship Power Supply System in the Port of Gdask (OPS – Onshore Power Supply).”

The research will include an assessment of demand, an analysis of the state of use of OPS systems for providing ships with electricity from shore, and a strategy to install this technology in the Port of Gdańsk.





Latest Posts

UWL announces vessel partnership with Emirates Shipping Line

UWL, a leading American-owned NVOCC (Non-Vessel Operating Common Carrier) and global logistics provider, welcomes Emirates Shipping Line as the new vessel partner for its...

Sea-Intelligence: Port Power Rankings

 Sea-Intelligence analyses port performance in terms of schedule reliability, across the 202 deep-sea ports with the largest number of container vessel calls, by creating...

Suez slowdown reshapes Red Sea’s port map

The macro picture of the Red Sea is worsen as canal transits are at half-mast, and the region has relinquished its role as the...

We asked AI: When containers become pools

We asked AI what a container might look like if it was trasformed into a pool. The result? Long steel containers, many of them stacked,...

Transpacific crash may normalise charter market

Containership charter rates, which have defied the freight slump for some time, could be peaking, as some small ships chartered by opportunistic operators for...
error: Content is protected !!