Port of Saint John | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Canada |
Location | Saint John, New Brunswick |
Coordinates | 45°16′47″N 66°03′46″W / 45.2796°N 66.0628°W |
UN/LOCODE | CASJB[1] |
Details | |
Opened | Eighteenth century |
Size | 120 hectares |
No. of berths | 17[2] |
Draft depth | 13.0 m.[2] |
President and CEO | Craig Bell Estabrooks |
Statistics | |
Vessel arrivals | 921 |
Annual cargo tonnage | 27,454,799 metric revenue tons (FY2022)[3] |
Annual container volume | 150,194 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) (FY2022) |
Passenger traffic | 147890 passengers (FY 2022) [3] |
Annual revenue | CDN$23.8 million (FY 2018)[4] |
Net income | CDN$4.5 million (FY 2018) |
Website www |
The Port of Saint John is a port complex that occupies 120 hectares (300 acres) of land along 3,900 m (12,800 ft) of waterfront of the Saint John Harbour at the mouth of the Saint John River in the city of Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.[5] The Port of Saint John, with facilities on both sides of the river, is noted for its extreme tidal range and river currents. Because of the semi-diurnal tides and the river influence, slack water occurs at approximately half tide and not at high or low water as at most other ports.[6]
The port is administered by the Saint John Port Authority, a federal agency. Major products shipped through the port include oil, forest products and potash. Container traffic has been steadily increasing since 2016 with DP World becoming the port operator and Canadian Pacific regaining access to the port in 2020 through the purchase of Central Maine and Quebec Railway. The port of Saint John has three container lines servicing it those being MSC CMA CGM and Hapag-Lloyd.
History
The Port of Saint John lies within Mi'gma'gi, the Mikmaw Nation ancestral stewardship region and greater Wabanaki Confederacy ancestral governance area. The location was first visited by Samuel de Champlain on his voyage of discovery to the New World in 1604, who described the Saint John River as "one of the largest and deepest we had yet seen" and who was advised by his Mi'kmaq guides that the river provided a route to the Saint Lawrence River valley with only a short portage.[7] Because of its strategic location, it became the site of a French stronghold known as Fort La Tour. Though the fort was sacked in 1645, the river remained an important trade route for French, English and First Nations traders throughout the 17th and 18th centuries.
The port did not begin to develop in earnest until the influx of United Empire Loyalists in 1783. It developed rapidly as a result of timber trade and shipbuilding. Saint John became the province's leading industrial centre during the 19th century with much of the shipbuilding industry being concentrated on Courtney Bay outside the main harbour area. One of the best known ships built in Saint John was the Marco Polo (1851) which became renowned for its speed.
The Great Famine of Ireland of 1845–1849 saw a large immigrant influx, and to handle the new arrivals, the government constructed a quarantine station and hospital on Partridge Island at the mouth of the harbour. The immigration station continued to operate for many decades. In 1859, Partridge Island also became known as the site of the first successful demonstration of an automated steam-powered foghorn, invented by the Scotsman Robert Foulis who had settled in the city. The foghorn is "ranked by historians as one of the most outstanding in the development of navigation aids."[8]
For many years, the Port prospered as the winter port for Montreal. In 1889 the Canadian Pacific Railway opened a line across the state of Maine from Montreal to Saint John and transferred the majority of its trans-Atlantic passenger and cargo shipping to the port during the winter months.
During the First World War, the Port of Saint John became a trans-shipment point for the British Empire's war effort. It had less importance during World War II as the navy focus had been consolidated in Halifax.
The port suffered a decline following the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway and the introduction of icebreaker services in the Seaway in the 1960s. In 1994 CPR left Saint John when it sold the line to shortline operator New Brunswick Southern Railway. The Canadian National Railway still services Saint John with a secondary mainline from Moncton. CPR made a return in 2020 with the purchase of Central Maine and Quebec Railway that connects with Irving owner NBSR in Brownville Junction Maine
Port facilities
There are several marine facilities situated on either side of the harbour.
The west side of the harbour includes:
- the Lower West Terminal, for dry bulk and liquid bulk
- the American Iron and Metals Terminal, for dry bulk
- inter-provincial ferry terminal, operated by Bay Ferries for passenger and vehicle ferry service to Digby, Nova Scotia
- the Rodney Container Terminal, for container, dry bulk, break bulk and project cargo (operated by DP World formerly operated by Logistec Stevedoring, formerly operated by BrunTerm)
- the Navy Island Terminal, for container, dry bulk, break bulk and project cargo (formerly operated by ForTerm)
The east side of the harbour includes:
- HMCS Brunswicker, a Royal Canadian Navy reserve unit
- Canadian Coast Guard Station Saint John, a search and rescue station operating the lifeboat CCGS Courtney Bay
- the Long Wharf Terminal, for dry bulk, break bulk and project cargo
- the Pugsley Terminal, for dry bulk, break bulk and project cargo
- the Marco Polo Cruise Terminal[5][9]
- the Diamond Jubilee Cruise Terminal
- the Lower Cove Terminal, for dry bulk, break bulk and project cargo
- the Barrack Point Potash Terminal
- the Irving Oil Refinery Terminal, operated by Irving Oil
- the Canaport crude oil receiving terminal, handling supertankers for Irving Oil at Mispec Point, located 9 kilometres southeast of the city
- the Canaport LNG liquified natural gas receiving terminal, located adjacent to the Canaport crude oil terminal[10]
Former facilities:
- the former Canadian Coast Guard Base Saint John property on the east side, undergoing redevelopment as Fundy Quay
- the former Saint John Shipbuilding property on the east side, currently vacant
- the former Lantic Sugar property on the east side, razed and currently vacant
- the former Intercolonial Railway grain elevator on the west side, razed and currently vacant
- the former Canadian Pacific Railway grain elevator on the west side, razed and currently vacant
See also
References
- ↑ "UNLOCODE (CA) - CANADA". www.unece.org. UNECE. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
- 1 2 "Port of Saint John, Canada". www.findaport.com. Shipping Guides Ltd. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
- 1 2 https://www.sjport.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Port-SJ-Annual-Report-2021-Eng-FINAL.pdf
- ↑ 2009 Annual Report, p.10 Archived 2010-12-24 at the Wayback Machine
- 1 2 Port of Saint John, Port Facilities Archived 2011-04-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Port of Saint John, Port Conditions Archived 2010-12-24 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ David Hackett Fischer, Champlain's Dream, Knopf, 2008, p. 166
- ↑ Dictionary of Canadian Biography, "Robert Foulis"
- ↑ Marco Polo Cruise Terminal
- ↑ Canaport LNG
Further reading
- Frederick William Wallace, The Romance of a Great Port: The Story of Saint John, New Brunswick (1935)