About the Port
One of the largest municipal ports in England and Wales, the
Port of Ramsgate now provides the only passenger ferry service
between the Channel ports and Belgium.
Operated by TransEuropa, passengers
can choose from eight sailings a day between Ramsgate and Ostend.
Freight services have been operated by TransEuropa between the two
ports since 1998 and currently six ships make the crossing up to 20
times a day.
Of the 26 municipal ports in
England and Wales, Ramsgate is second in turnover only to
Portsmouth. Owned and operated by Thanet District Council’s
Maritime Services division, the Port has seen freight volumes
increase threefold over the last six years, with commercial ferry
movements growing by 15% in 2003.
Set on 32 acres of dedicated port
land, the Port of Ramsgate has three modern Ro-Ro bridges, capable
of accommodating conventional Ro-Ro fast ferry freight services.
Full passenger and freight vessel facilities allow the Port to
operate and service the three berths simultaneously, allowing
Ramsgate to handle up to 500,000 freight units and five million
passengers each year.
The Port can accommodate vessels of up to 160 metres in length
with 6.5 metres draft with no tidal restrictions and has the
capacity to handle multi-decked vessels, stern and quarter ramps.
With easy access to the open sea, it takes an average of 20 minutes
from berth to clearing a buoyed channel and access is possible at
all states of the tide and in most weather conditions.
In 2002, the SEAPORTS study
predicted that cross channel freight was likely to increase
annually by 3.7%, while passenger traffic would grow by 4.3% per
annum. Using these projections, there will be a shortfall in
channel port capacity by 2016 of more than 1,000,000 freight units
per year.
The Port of Ramsgate is well placed
to play its part in contributing to meeting this demand for
increased passenger and freight facilities in the south east. With
a dedicated £30 million road into the port and dual carriageway
links to the M2 motorway, driving times between Thanet and the
outskirts of London have been cut to just over an hour. High speed
passenger rail services are expected to start in 2009, cutting the
journey time from Ramsgate to London to just 63 minutes.
The Port of Ramsgate operates an
aggregate import facility, in partnership with Brett Aggregates,
which can accommodate vessels of up to 60 metres in length,
carrying 1,200 tonnes of cargo. Type one, crushed slag and crushed
limestone is imported, which is then used for road and building
bases.
With sufficient available land and
deep water to allow future diversification and the availability of
hard standing and berthing slots, The Port of Ramsgate is well
placed for short sea shipping trades and to capitalise on the
predicted over capacity in the channel ports in the next 10
years.