Poti Sea Port (Poti)
Georgia /
Samagrelo and Zemo Svaneti /
Poti
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The Poti Sea Port (Georgian: ფოთის საზღვაო ნავსადგური, p’ot’is sazghvao navsadguri) is a major seaport and harbor off the eastern Black Sea coast at the mouth of the Rioni River in Poti, Georgia. Its UN/LOCODE is GEPTI and is located at 42°9′18″N 41°39′16″E / 42.155°N 41.65444°E / 42.155; 41.65444
The Poti seaport is a cross point of the Trans-Caucasian Corridor/TRACECA, a multinational project which goes through Tashkent – Ashgabat – Türkmenbaşy – Baku and Poti to Romanian port of Constanţa and Bulgarian port Varna, thus linking the landlocked countries of Central Asia and the Caucasus to Eastern Europe.
The construction of a seaport at Poti was conceived shortly after the Russian Empire conquered the town from the Ottoman Empire in 1828. In 1858, Poti was granted the status of a port city, but it was not until 1899 when, under the patronage of the mayor of Poti Niko Nikoladze, the construction entered the sprint stages and was basically complete by 1907. The seaport has since reconstructed several times, most recently under the sponsorship of the Dutch government and the European Union. [1]
In 2007, the total throughput was 7.7 million tons and container handling was 185,000 TEU.[2]
In April 2008, Georgia sold a 51% stake of the Poti port area to the Investment Authority of the UAE’s Ras Al Khaimah (RAK) emirate to develop a free economic zone (FEZ) in a 49-year management concession, and to manage a new port terminal. The creation of a new FEZ was officially inaugurated by the President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili on April 15, 2008
www.potiseaport.com/?psp-lang=en
The Poti seaport is a cross point of the Trans-Caucasian Corridor/TRACECA, a multinational project which goes through Tashkent – Ashgabat – Türkmenbaşy – Baku and Poti to Romanian port of Constanţa and Bulgarian port Varna, thus linking the landlocked countries of Central Asia and the Caucasus to Eastern Europe.
The construction of a seaport at Poti was conceived shortly after the Russian Empire conquered the town from the Ottoman Empire in 1828. In 1858, Poti was granted the status of a port city, but it was not until 1899 when, under the patronage of the mayor of Poti Niko Nikoladze, the construction entered the sprint stages and was basically complete by 1907. The seaport has since reconstructed several times, most recently under the sponsorship of the Dutch government and the European Union. [1]
In 2007, the total throughput was 7.7 million tons and container handling was 185,000 TEU.[2]
In April 2008, Georgia sold a 51% stake of the Poti port area to the Investment Authority of the UAE’s Ras Al Khaimah (RAK) emirate to develop a free economic zone (FEZ) in a 49-year management concession, and to manage a new port terminal. The creation of a new FEZ was officially inaugurated by the President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili on April 15, 2008
www.potiseaport.com/?psp-lang=en
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poti_Sea_Port
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 42°9'12"N 41°39'37"E
- Порт Тамань 526 km
- Port of Mariupol 639 km
- Zonguldak 825 km
- Southern Port 982 km
- Transinvestservice (TIS) Terminal 984 km
- Port Chornomorsk 994 km
- Port of Odesa 996 km
- Constanţa South Harbor 1080 km
- Constanţa North Harbor 1080 km
- Midia Port 1082 km
- Yacht-club 0.4 km
- Ship yard 0.4 km
- POLZUG INTERMODAL LLC 0.5 km
- Coast Guard Base 0.7 km
- Breakwater 0.7 km
- Breakwater 0.8 km
- Kokaysko Lake 1.3 km
- Cemetery 2.1 km
- Kolkheti National Park 15 km
- Khobi District 22 km