Jadranska vrata (Adriatic Gate Container Terminal) is a Croatian port operating company which operates port facilities at the largest Croatian Port of Rijeka. Jadranska vrata d.d. company was founded as a Luka Rijeka d.d. subsidiary, and tasked with operating the container cargo terminal located in the Brajdica district of Rijeka. As of August 2011, the International Container Terminal Services Inc. (ICTSI) acquired 51% share in the company becoming a strategic partner, and the company is since also prominent under its English name—Adriatic Gate Container Terminal. Jadranska vrata d.d. has acquired a separate concession to operate the container terminal in the Port of Rijeka until 2041.[1][2][3][4]

Jadranska vrata d.d.
Company typePublic
IndustryTransport
Founded2001
HeadquartersRijeka, Croatia
ParentICTSI (51%)
Luka Rijeka (49%)
Websitewww.adriatic-gate.hr

History edit

The container terminal is located in the Sušak basin Port of Rijeka, and it started operating in 1977. Then, in that first phase of construction, the first container crane was installed in the port. After that, in 1987, a 300-meter-long southern shore with a depth of 11.2 meters was built. Jadranska vrata d.d. have been the holder of the concession at the Brajdica container terminal since 2001. In 2011 the International Container Terminal Services Inc. (ICTSI) acquired 51% share in the company with Luka Rijeka d.d. holding the rest.[4][5]

In 2013, after the implementation of the Rijeka Gateway project at the container terminal, the second phase of the terminal's construction was completed, i.e. the extension of the wharf for another berth and the corresponding increase in storage areas, as well as the construction of the entry-exit point. With the completion of works worth 30 million Euros, the depth of the sea increased to a minimum of 14.2 meters and enabled the servicing of container ships up to 370 meters in length, which achieved a maximum capacity of 600,000 TEU. This was followed by the installation of a temporary buoy for the mooring of ships and the construction of an entry and exit point and a veterinary. After the implementation of expansion works within the framework of the Rijeka Gateway project, the concessionaire company Jadranska vrata d.d. installed new coastal and warehouse equipment for container transshipment worth 23 million Euros, namely two Panamax coastal cranes with a large capacity, six container bridges and two container bridges for railways.[5]

In addition to the large investment in the implementation of the Rijeka Gateway project, significant funds were approved for the implementation of the European project from the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF). The project called Development of a multimodal platform in the port of Rijeka and connection with the container terminal Jadranska vrata (POR2CORE-AGCT) in the value of 35,556,000 euros will improve the intermodal terminal by reconstructing the existing Rijeka-Brajdica marshalling yard and by expanding the existing tunnel with a length of 400 meters for construction purposes extraction track, which will significantly increase the share of railway transport in container traffic by December 2020.[5]

In 2018, the project Improvement of the infrastructure of the port of Rijeka - AGCT dredging (POR2CORE-AGCT dredging) was also approved. The project worth 13.9 million Euros will also be financed from the CEF program in partnership with the concessionaire at the terminal, Jadranska vrata d.d. The funds will be used to finance the adaptation of the port in order to increase the capacity and the possibility of accepting larger vessels.[5]

Sea connectivity edit

Container terminals is connected via two direct lines with Far East and five feeder services to other Medditeranean ports:[6]

  • Maersk, MSC, Hamburg Sud
    • Tianjinxingang → Dalian → Busan → Ningbo → Shanghai → Shekou → Singapore → Suez → Port Said East → Haifa → Koper → Trieste → Rijeka → Trieste → Port Said East → Suez → King Abdullah Port → Salalah → Singapore → Tianjinxingang
  • CMA CGM, COSCO, Evergreen, OOCL
    • Shanghai → Ningbo → Busan → Shekou → Singapore → Malta → Koper → Trieste → Rijeka → Port Said West → Jeddah → Port Kelang → Shekou → Shanghai
  • COSCO, OOCL
    • Rijeka → Piraeus → Rijeka
  • Hapag-Lloyd, ONE,
    • Piraeus → Damietta → Koper → Ancona → Rijeka → Venice → Piraeus
  • MSC
    • Gioia Tauro → Bar → Rijeka → Ploce → Gioia Tauro
  • Maersk
    • Piraeus → Damietta → Koper → Ancona → Rijeka → Venice → Piraeus
  • CMA CGM
    • Venice → Koper → Rijeka → Malta → Bejaia→ Malta→ Taranto → Bar → Ancona → Venice

Container throughput edit

Terminal traffic from 2003 until today:[7]

Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
TEU 12,711 15,215 28,298 60,846 76,258 94,390 145,024 168,761 130,740 137,048 150,677 171,945 169,943 192,004 200,102 214,348 249,975 260,375 305,049 344,091 356,068

References edit

  1. ^ "Container and Ro-Ro Terminal". Luka Rijeka d.d. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  2. ^ "Rijeka: planovi povećanja prometa kontejnerskog terminala" [Rijeka: Plans to expand container terminal operations] (in Croatian). Ministry of the Sea, Transport and Infrastructure (Croatia). June 8, 2011. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  3. ^ "Filipinci preuzeli terminal na Brajdici" [Filipinos take over Brajdica terminal] (in Croatian). Croatian Radiotelevision. March 5, 2011. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  4. ^ a b "Jadranska vrata d.d. koncesionar do 2041.godine" [Jadranska vrata d.d. acquire a concession until year 2041] (in Croatian). Jadranska vrata d.d. December 28, 2009. Archived from the original on September 3, 2011. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d "Kontejnerski terminal Jadranska vrata" [Adriatic Gate Container Terminal]. Lučka uprava Rijeka (in Croatian). Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  6. ^ "Redoviti brodski promet" [Regular shipping transport]. Adriatic Gate Contairner Terminal (in Croatian). Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  7. ^ "Statistika prometa" [Traffic statistics]. Lučka uprava Rijeka (in Croatian). Retrieved 18 January 2023.