Construction

Giant cranes arrive at DP World London Gateway

Cranes are the biggest in operation in the UK and will increase speed and efficiency of new shipping port

The cranes arrive at DP World London Gateway.

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Giant cranes, taller than the London Eye, were sailed into the Thames Estuary and berthed at the UK’s new global shipping port, DP World London Gateway, DP World announced on Friday.

Measuring 138m in height, the three new cranes were transported from China in a two month sea voyage. Weighing 2,000 tonnes each, the cranes are taller than Wembley Stadium’s arch and are two and a half times the height of Nelson’s Column. They are the first in the UK to be able to lift four containers at once, increasing the speed and efficiency of the port.

“London Gateway port, and the combined logistics park, is Britain’s new gateway for global trade. These cranes will bring new innovation and efficiency to the supply chain industry. It won’t be long before importers and exporters across the country will be able to cut costs dramatically from their supply chains by choosing London Gateway, a port which is much closer to where goods need to go,” said Simon Moore, CEO of DP World, London Gateway.

“A world-class deep-sea container port requires a world-class set of cranes. They will be the lynchpin of the operation – the biggest, most modern and most efficient the UK has ever seen.

Moore added: “We are also working on several aspects of London Gateway, including recruiting hundreds of staff who will operate and maintain equipment; investing millions of pounds into local roads, including the A13 and the M25 motorway; and building 20 kilometres of new rail track to ensure that over 30% of containers can move by rail.”

Built by Shanghai Zhenhua Heavy Industries Company, the cranes set sail from China on January 7. Two more cranes set sail in February, while a further 19 are planned for delivery of the next few years.

The cranes will operate on a quay wall that is 2.7km in length, with foundations that are 16 storeys deep into the ground.

Andrew Bowen, London Gateway engineering director, said: “London Gateway is built on new land created from material that we dredged from the existing shipping channel. So, these new cranes will be operating on land that, up until a few months back, was in the sea.”

The shipping channel has been dredged from 11 metres to 14.5 metres in the inner channel and 16 metres in the outer channel. The berth pockets have been deepened to 17 metres, allowing the world’s largest ships to call at London Gateway.

Bowen continued: “We have more than 2,300 people now employed on-site who are in the final stages of constructing what we believe is the most technologically advanced port in the world, with hundreds more employed behind the scenes. The majority are British engineers and construction companies, which means this is great news for the economy.

London Gateway is set to create 36,000 jobs at full build out, with some 2,000 directly employed in the port, 10,000 employed in the logistics park, and over 24,000 in-direct and induced jobs being created in the supply chain.

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