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Port Kembla (seaport)

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Lake type
  
Cargo port

Surface area
  
1.4 km (0.54 sq mi)

Area
  
140 ha

Primary outflows
  
Tasman Sea, Pacific Ocean

Basin countries
  
Australia

Average depth
  
6.1 m (20 ft)

Catchment area
  
6.3 km²

Settlements
  
Wollongong, Port Kembla

Port Kembla (seaport) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Illawarra, New South Wales

Water volume
  
8,439,000 m (298,000,000 cu ft)

Managing agency
  
Port Kembla Port Corporation

Port Kembla is a man-made cargo port or artificial harbour, with an outer harbour protected by breakwaters and an inner harbour constructed by dredging, located in the Illawarra region of New South Wales, Australia.

Contents

Activities within the port are managed by the Port Kembla Port Corporation.

Iron ore

The first shipment of iron ore for use in Australian Iron and Steel's new blast furnace was received from Whyalla, South Australia in 1928. The ore shipment of 5,500 tonnes had been mined by the Broken Hill Proprietary Company at Iron Knob in the Middleback Ranges. In 1952 the first Yampi-class bulk carriers delivered iron ore to Port Kembla, carrying maximum loads of 11,000 tonnes.

Location and features

Located to the east of the Wollongong suburb of Port Kembla, the harbour of Port Kembla comprises a 8,439 megalitres (298.0×10^6 cu ft) body of water with a surface area of 1.4 square kilometres (0.54 sq mi) at a dredged average depth of 6.1 metres (20 ft) drawn from a catchment area of 6.3 square kilometres (2.4 sq mi).

The port of Port Kembla was established in the late 1890s to facilitate the export of coal from the mines of the Illawarra region. Diversification of the port facilities during the late-1980s and since, has seen the port to include general and break bulk cargoes, containers and motor vehicle imports, and bulk grain exports.

Regulation of the port rests with a number of federal, state, and local government agencies including the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, the Environment Protection Authority, and Wollongong City Council.

References

Port Kembla (seaport) Wikipedia


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