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Handysize refers to a dry bulk carrier or an oil tanker with a capacity between 15,000 and 35,000 DWT. Sometimes they are used to refer vessels with dwt of up to 60,000, thus including Handymax and Supramax vessels under its category. These vessels also have shallower draught in comparison to larger Supramax, Panamax and Chinamax ships, which allows them to operate in most of ports and terminals across the world. Due to their small dimensions, handysize ships can serve ports and terminals of all sizes, even ports with length and draught restrictions. As they are fitted with on-deck cranes, they can also serve ports lacking transshipment infrastructure. As a result, handysize vessels make up the majority of bulk carriers over 10,000 DWT.

handysize-16-wiki-18897.jpg

Handysize
Nord Hakata
Today, most of handysize vessels operate within regional trade routes. These ships are capable of traveling to small ports with length and draught restrictions, as well as lacking the infrastructure for cargo loading and unloading. They are used to carry small bulk cargoes, often in parcel size where individual cargo holds may have a different commodity. Their dry bulk cargo includes iron ore, coal, cement, phosphate, finished steel products, wooden logs, fertilizer, and grains to name a few.

handysize-16-wiki-18988.jpg

Handysize IVS Hunter

Handysize
vessels are primarily built by shipyards in Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam, India and the Philippines. In addition, some other countries also have the expertise and capacity to build small-sized bulk carriers. The most typical handysize ships being built today are of size 32,000 DWT with a draught of 10 m (33ft). They boast five cargo holds with four on-deck cranes for cargo handling. Some of handysize ships are also equipped with stanchions for easy loading of wooden logs on deck.

http://maritime-connector.com/wiki/handysize/

Well you are right about Karnaphuli draft being shallow but let me add that a lot of Shipbuilding is done in low lying places like the Netherlands and also some parts of Germany where terrain is similar to Chittagong and draft is no deeper than 30 feet, which is what Karnaphuli has where most of the shipyards in CTG are.
I
The draft is a few feet higher at high tide and that helps. Also floating an empty hull and then building the superstructure separately and adding it later in a high draft location can also help.

The Meyer Werft Shipyard in Papenburg, Germany is situated on the shores of the river Ems. In Bangladesh standards this river can be called a ditch or 'khaal' or 'nullah', and is a lot smaller than our Karnaphuli. The river Ems is barely 30 feet deep and has numerous treacherous sandbars.

HOW TO SQUEEZE A HUGE SHIP DOWN A TINY RIVER
2014-09-22-15.58.00.jpg

Royal Caribbean's Quantum of the Seas squeezes past a sealock on the river Ems.
MEYER WERFT


IN EARLY NOVEMBER, Royal Caribbean’s latest cruise ship, the truly colossal Quantum of the Seas, makes its maiden voyage. It is a beast of a ship, 1,141 feet long with room for more than 4,000 passengers and amenities like a skydiving simulator. But before anyone can kill time driving the 30 bumper cars or snacking at the onboard food truck, the Quantum had to reach the ocean.

This proved to be quite tricky, because the shipyard the built the Quantum is 20 miles inland, along a river barely wider than the ship.

On Monday, a team at Meyer Werft, the German company that built Quantum, spent 12 hours inching the ship downriver from its shipyard in Papenburg to the North Sea. The river was juuuust deep enough for the vessel, and so narrow that the ship, which has a beam of 136 feet, had just a few feet to spare. It took six captains to get the ship to sea. To make it a bit easier, they made the trip backward, inching along at 3 to 5 mph, relying upon GPS and a floating crane that had to move a bridge out of the way.

“Everything is unusual on this trip,” says Bernard Meyer, managing partner of the firm.

Quantum_of_the_Seas_MG_6859_small.jpg

The long journey down the Ems lasted through the night.


MEYER WERFT
Meyer is the great-great-great-grandson of Willm Rolf Meyer. He founded the company in 1795, choosing a spot in Papenburg so construction projects would be safe from storms. Passenger cruise ships comprise the majority of the projects these days, and the company's moved plenty of ships down the Ems in a process called “conveyance.” But the Quantum, which weighs 168,000 tons, is by far its largest.


Building the ship was a piece of cake compared to delivering it. The Quantum has a beam (its widest point at the water line) of 136 feet, just shy of the maximum size that can be conveyed downriver. At some points during the trip, the ship had just 2 feet of clearance on either side. Complicating matters, the Ems is dotted with sandbars and isn’t particularly deep. “It’s more like a ditch,” says Harri Kulovaara, an executive vice president at Royal Caribbean.

Preparing the River
The size of the river (or the ship, depending upon your point of view) was only part of the challenge. The Ems is crossed by three bridges, and each was swung open to allow Quantum to pass. The third, which is used by a railroad, didn't open quite far enough, so a portion of it was removed.

There was other prep work to do. The six captains who piloted Quantum over the twelve hour stretch spent two weeks practicing in a simulator. A crew dredged the river, deepening it to about 24 feet where necessary. The weather ultimately dictated when the crew could make its move; calm conditions were crucial, and a full moon (or no moon) is ideal to ensure the water was at its deepest. Although Meyer Werft can manipulate water levels using tidal barriers, it does so sparingly for ecological concerns. It did, however, close the barriers to keep the water level at high tide, at which time the Ems is roughly 30 feet deep. That's just enough for the Quantum, which has a draft of 28 feet.

Everything aligned on Monday, and the six captains set to work in the afternoon. Given the intense concentration needed to do the job, they worked in pairs for 90 minute shifts. One captain steered the bow, the other guided the stern. The unusual maneuvering system helps a ship this big precisely navigate tight turns and narrow squeezes, much like a tiller driver helps the driver of a hook-and-ladder firetruck navigate city streets.

Spectators lining the river could be forgiven for thinking Quantum was headed upriver, given that it went downriver backward. Using the propellers to pull from the front offers better control than pushing from the back (the same is true for front wheel-drive cars). Tug boats, attached directly, rather than by a cable, to the bow and stern of the ship, provided extra control.


Screen-Shot-2014-09-22-at-11.00.24-AM.png

The captains on Quantum watched computer simulations like this one to see the ship's exact position.


MEYER WERFT
In tight spots, the captains weren’t looking over the sides of the ship like a driver trying to fit into an SUV into a compact parking spot. They were watching conning displays showing information from the GPS that provided the ship’s exact position to within five centimeters, along with forecasts of where the ship would be in 30, 60, and 90 seconds if the steering inputs weren’t changed.

Now that Quantum is out in the open, Meyer Werft will make the final touches (the ship’s about 97 percent finished) before handing it off to Royal Caribbean next month. But Meyer’s relief won’t last too long: His shipyard already has the contracts to work on Quantum’s two sister ships, Anthem of the Seas and Ovation of the Seas.

Next spring, they’ll be dredging the river and opening the bridges for another harrowing journey to the sea.

Quantum_of_the_Seas_MG_6734_small.jpg

The spectacle of watching Quantum going downriver drew a lot of spectators.


MEYER WERFT


https://www.wired.com/2014/09/conveyance-quantum-of-the-seas/

This shipyard in Papenburg is 20 miles inland from sea and routinely builds expensive cruise ships that displace in excess of 100,000 tons and have drafts that get close to the depth of the river. The following pictures show how they get these ships to the sea through this river. Building up to 30 ft. high draft ships is possible in Bangladesh, upto 40,000 DWT bulk carriers, we just have to plan things properly by collaborating in shipyard building with China and Korea.

cruise-ship-celebrity-silhouette-leaves-the-shipyard-in-papenburg-DW0X3C.jpg
cruise-ship-celebrity-silhouette-leaves-the-shipyard-in-papenburg-DW0PH1.jpg

AIDAstella_MeyerWerft.jpg

"A crew dredged the river, deepening it to about 24 feet where necessary. The weather ultimately dictated when the crew could make its move; calm conditions were crucial, and a full moon (or no moon) is ideal to ensure the water was at its deepest. Although Meyer Werft can manipulate water levels using tidal barriers, it does so sparingly for ecological concerns. It did, however, close the barriers to keep the water level at high tide, at which time the Ems is roughly 30 feet deep. That's just enough for the Quantum, which has a draft of 28 feet."

we have to ask the question - how feasible is it do dredge our rivers down to 20ft or more, when it would require us to move millions of tons of sand just to dig down to 10ft depth... our rivers are unique in the world.... they carry more sand than anyone else can imagine...
 
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"A crew dredged the river, deepening it to about 24 feet where necessary. The weather ultimately dictated when the crew could make its move; calm conditions were crucial, and a full moon (or no moon) is ideal to ensure the water was at its deepest. Although Meyer Werft can manipulate water levels using tidal barriers, it does so sparingly for ecological concerns. It did, however, close the barriers to keep the water level at high tide, at which time the Ems is roughly 30 feet deep. That's just enough for the Quantum, which has a draft of 28 feet."

we have to ask the question - how feasible is it do dredge our rivers down to 20ft or more, when it would require us to move millions of tons of sand just to dig down to 10ft depth... our rivers are unique in the world.... they carry more sand than anyone else can imagine...

Well what you are saying that they deepened it 'further' another 24 feet.

Yes I'd say that is a rather tall task. But you are not digging the whole river. You are making a channel as wide as the bottom of the ship that is deep enough to accommodate it. In those cases you don't use cutter section dredger like this which we already make.(These were some small ones made some ten years ago by Karnafuly Ship Builders Limited. Much larger ones are made locally nowadays.)

cutter-suction-dredger_768_615_84_c1.jpg


You use massive coastal dredgers like these which are being used at Payra by dutch companies for deepening the harbor over there to about 10 plus meters. These can be either massive coastal cutter-suction dredgers, or even excavation dredgers.

webSideView_Fixed_0000-48530.jpg


or even massive clamshell or bucket excavation or suction hopper dredgers which can remove hundreds of tons of silt per week at a minimum. Payra Bay will have uniform draft of 10m when JND will complete the job (they started earlier this year on test basis).

http://www.dredgingtoday.com/2016/05/25/jan-de-nul-signs-payra-port-dredging-contract/

Grab_Dredging_Process.JPG
wasa2-1024x740.jpg
qplate13_1a.jpg
skbjzamaar-1144046827-b809-0.jpg


So - my point is, this is possible in Chittagong and in Payra too. May not be cheap, but it is possible if the stakes are high, when you are floating a $70-$100 Million build down the river using an artificial deep channel to the mouth of the river, it can be done.
 
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Well what you are saying that they deepened it 'further' another 24 feet.

Yes I'd say that is a rather tall task. But you are not digging the whole river. You are making a channel as wide as the bottom of the ship that is deep enough to accommodate it. In those cases you don't use cutter section dredger like this which we already make.(These were some small ones made some ten years ago by Karnafuly Ship Builders Limited. Much larger ones are made locally nowadays.)

cutter-suction-dredger_768_615_84_c1.jpg


You use massive coastal dredgers like these which are being used at Payra by dutch companies for deepening the harbor over there to about 10 plus meters. These can be either massive coastal cutter-suction dredgers, or even excavation dredgers.

webSideView_Fixed_0000-48530.jpg


or even massive clamshell or bucket excavation or suction hopper dredgers which can remove hundreds of tons of silt per week at a minimum. Payra Bay will have uniform draft of 10m when JND will complete the job (they started earlier this year on test basis).

http://www.dredgingtoday.com/2016/05/25/jan-de-nul-signs-payra-port-dredging-contract/

Grab_Dredging_Process.JPG
wasa2-1024x740.jpg
qplate13_1a.jpg
skbjzamaar-1144046827-b809-0.jpg


So - my point is, this is possible in Chittagong and in Payra too. May not be cheap, but it is possible if the stakes are high, when you are floating a $70-$100 Million build down the river using an artificial deep channel to the mouth of the river, it can be done.

Bangladesh coastline is shallow enough to prevent bigger ships from going even near the coast.... the cause we all know.... we are talking about three of the mightiest rivers in the globe converging on place to deposit a whopping 2.4 billion tons of silt every single year!!.... this is not faced by any other country in the world.... this is not like you dredge a channel today and then you can look the other way for another two days..... this is why I say that 24ft dredging is more than luxury if you have to do it for shipbuilding alone.... even a deep-sea port in Bangladesh would struggle to keep a channel that deep....

we have more important dredging projects that may require merely 10-12ft of water to make a major difference in the country's economy.... e.g. dredging the Padma up to Rajshahi and Jamuna up to Chilmari...
 
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Bangladesh coastline is shallow enough to prevent bigger ships from going even near the coast.... the cause we all know.... we are talking about three of the mightiest rivers in the globe converging on place to deposit a whopping 2.4 billion tons of silt every single year!!....

While I agree with you on these points, we are talking about the mouth of Karnaphuli and the port of Payra near Patuakhali.

Karnaphuli is not that large a river like the three mighty rivers we have and the silt being carried down is nowhere as voluminous as the Ganges delta which sources the Himalayan Ranges upstream.

Some Info on Chittagong port draft:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following Navigation Aids guide ships to approach the Port of Chittagong.
Navigational facilities
  • Pilotage is compulsory for ocean going vessels.
  • The entrance to the river is constantly changing and no vessels are allowed to enter without pilot.
  • The propelling distance from the pilot ground at the outer anchorage to the main jetties is approximately 11 nautical miles.
  • The vessels having a maximum draft of 9.14 m and L.O.A 187.77 m can enter and berth at the jetties.
  • In the navigational channel there are three Bars namely the Outer Bar, the Inner Bar and the Gupta Bar located at a distance of 14.5 km, 13 km and 7.58 km respectively from the jetties.
  • The depths of water at these three bars primarily control permissible draft for navigation of the vessels inside the port.
  • The width of the navigational channel varies from place to place.
  • A minimum of 250 m channel width is maintained.
  • The pilot board is approximately 2 nautical miles seaward of the outer buoy.
  • The ship movements generally commence about 4 to 5 hours before the high water of the day.
  • The tides are semi-diurnal and the range varies from 1.5 to 4.8 at high water.
  • The tides are termed as A.M and P.M tide.

CHITTAGONG PORT POSITION BY
LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE.
1. PORT LIMITS (Amended) With Patenga Beacon as center if an arc in drawn seaward with a radius of 7 (Seven) nautical miles till intersects the Coastline in Position Lat: 22º 20.4’ N, Long: 091º 45.4’ E in the North and Lat: 22º 7’ N, Long: 091º 50.5’ E in the South the area enclosed within the extremities of the arc.
2. PILOT STATION LAT 22º 11.9 N, LONG 91º 47.0 E
3. ANCHORAGE “A” LAT 22º 14.0 N, LONG 91º 44.0 E
4. ANCHORAGE “B” LAT 22º 12.0 N, LONG 91º 43.9 E
5. ANCHORAGE “C” LAT 22º 11.0 N, LONG 91º 47.12 E
6. KUTUBDIA ANCHORAGE LAT 21º 52.8 N, LONG 91º 41.5 E



      • BERTH WISE DETAILS.
        SL NAME OF BERTH LOA(M) F.W DRAFT (M) REMARKS
        01 MAIN JETTY BERTH 2-5 186.00 8.55 GENERAL BERTH
        02 MAIN JETTY – 6 186.00 8.55 CONTAINER BERTH
        03 MAINJETTY 7-8-9 186.00 8.55 GENERAL BERTH
        04 MAIN JETTY 10-13 186.00 8.55 CONTAINER BERTH
        05 MPB / CCT 1-3 TOTAL 450.00 9.14 CONTAINER BERTH
        06 NEW MOORING CONRAINER TERMINAL-1 (NCT) 186.00 9.14 CONTAINER BERTH HEAVY PROJECT CARGO AND ALSO OTHER BULK / BAG CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL BE AT OVER SIDE ONLY.
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-2 186.00 9.14
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-3 186.00 9.14
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-4 186.00 9.00
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-5 186.00 9.00
        07 CEMENT CLINKER JETTY -1 147.00 9.15 CEMENT CLINKER BERTH AND ALSO THER CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL AT OVER SIDE ONLY.
        CEMENT CLINKER JETTY-2 167.00 7.90
        CEMENT CLINKER JETTY-3 158.50 8.55
        08 GSJ 186.00 9.15 GOVT.WHEAT
        09 T.S.P (1) 175.25 7.90 ROCK PHOSPHATE BERTH AND OTHER CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL BE AT OVER SIDE ONLY
        T.S.P (2) 143.40 8.25
        10 MOORING RM/3 182.90 7.60 OIL TANKER PRIVATE PARTY BERTH
        MOORING RM/4 150.00 9.15 OIL TANKER PERIVATE PARTY
        11 D.O.J – 5 186.00 9.15 BPC TANKER VESSEL
        D.O.J -6 186.00 9.15 BPC TANKER VESSEL
        D.O.J-7 186.00 9.15 BPC TANKER VESSEL
        12 DRY DOCK JETTY ( DOCKING) 182.00 5.00 REPAIRING
        13 DDJ 1-2 TOTAL 302.00 7.00 REPAIRING AND HEAVY CGO LIFTING
        14 MOORING RM-8 186.00 8.00 OIL TANKER PRIVATE PARTY
        MOORING RM-9 186.00 8.00 FOR REPAIR VESSEL
        MOORING RM-10 145.00 7.50 FOR REPAIR VESSEL
        15 SM-10 ( MOORING BERGE ) 20/30 3.00 PROJECT BERGE
        16 CUFL 186.00 8.50 PHOSPHERIC ACID, UREA BERTH AND OTHER CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL BE AT OVER SIDE ONLY
        17 KAFCO (U) 186.00 9.15 FOR EXPORT UREA
        KAFCO (A) 186.00 9.15 FOR EXPORT AMMONIA



    • SILO JETTY DETAILS.
      Silo jetty (only one berth for discharging only government food cargo). At silo permissible L.O.A 186 M / Beam: No Restriction / Air Draft : 52 M / F.W Draft : 9.15 M subject to day’s permissible in ward F/water draft.



    • MAIN JETTY DETAILS.
      Main jetty permissible L.O.A 186 M / Beam : No Restriction / Air Draft : 52 M / F.W Draft : 8.55 M subject to days permissible in ward F/water draft.



    • AT OUTER ANCHORAGE DETAILS.
      At outer anchorage there is no restriction about LOA / Beam / Air Draft of the vessels, but F/water draft limitation asf:-

        1. (a) “A” Anchorage 11.0 / 11.50 M ( subject to days permissible inward tide/draft)

        1. (b) “B” Anchorage 10.0 M

        1. (c) “C” Anchorage 8.55 to 9.0 M

      1. (d) Kutubdia Anchorage permissible draft 15/16 M
    • VESSEL ARRIVING INFORMATION.
      All incoming vessel will proceed from Kutubdia to Alpha Anchorage(Chittagong Outer Anchorage) by following BA chart no. 84 and current Admiralty Tide Tables(ATT). Also vessel is advised to contact port control by VHF channel 12/16 while vessel proceeds from Kutubdia to Alpha “A” Anchorage. Chittagong port control will guide in all respects round the clock. Vessel is advised to proceed from Kutubdia in such a time to arrive Alpha Anchorage at the time of high water tide of “Alpha” Anchorage. HW at A anchorage is approximately one hour before the HW time given in the ATT for Chittagong port. Vessel is advised to start to proceed from Kutubdia approximately 3 hrs before the high water of Alpha Anchorage.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

But Payra will have more siltation problem than Chittagong. Just dredging to 10m depth uniformly is supposed to cost $2B and that's the preliminary estimate.

sea_port.jpg


deep_sea_port_1.jpg


rs2100_postnik_yakovlev_hoofd.jpg
rs6674_p2080306.jpg


But yes - I get your point on the shallowness of the continental shelf and the littoral areas around the port of Chittagong.

Maybe the best area for a deep sea shipbuilding yard is around Sonadia peninsula or outer shore of Kutubdia Island where they have naturally deep draft of 14 to 17 meters.

Look at this bathymetry (depth) chart for Kutubdia (lowermost island on the right) where depth is more than 14 or so meters.

1-s2.0-S0272771416303791-gr5_lrg.jpg


http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0272771416303791#fig5

And last but not least this one. Kutubdia's appropriate location for a large shipyard becomes crystal clear now...

coastal+water.jpg


we have more important dredging projects that may require merely 10-12ft of water to make a major difference in the country's economy.... e.g. dredging the Padma up to Rajshahi and Jamuna up to Chilmari...

Yes those dredging projects will definitely pay dividends.
 
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. . . . . . . . .
While I agree with you on these points, we are talking about the mouth of Karnaphuli and the port of Payra near Patuakhali.

Karnaphuli is not that large a river like the three mighty rivers we have and the silt being carried down is nowhere as voluminous as the Ganges delta which sources the Himalayan Ranges upstream.

Some Info on Chittagong port draft:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following Navigation Aids guide ships to approach the Port of Chittagong.
Navigational facilities
  • Pilotage is compulsory for ocean going vessels.
  • The entrance to the river is constantly changing and no vessels are allowed to enter without pilot.
  • The propelling distance from the pilot ground at the outer anchorage to the main jetties is approximately 11 nautical miles.
  • The vessels having a maximum draft of 9.14 m and L.O.A 187.77 m can enter and berth at the jetties.
  • In the navigational channel there are three Bars namely the Outer Bar, the Inner Bar and the Gupta Bar located at a distance of 14.5 km, 13 km and 7.58 km respectively from the jetties.
  • The depths of water at these three bars primarily control permissible draft for navigation of the vessels inside the port.
  • The width of the navigational channel varies from place to place.
  • A minimum of 250 m channel width is maintained.
  • The pilot board is approximately 2 nautical miles seaward of the outer buoy.
  • The ship movements generally commence about 4 to 5 hours before the high water of the day.
  • The tides are semi-diurnal and the range varies from 1.5 to 4.8 at high water.
  • The tides are termed as A.M and P.M tide.

CHITTAGONG PORT POSITION BY
LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE.
1. PORT LIMITS (Amended) With Patenga Beacon as center if an arc in drawn seaward with a radius of 7 (Seven) nautical miles till intersects the Coastline in Position Lat: 22º 20.4’ N, Long: 091º 45.4’ E in the North and Lat: 22º 7’ N, Long: 091º 50.5’ E in the South the area enclosed within the extremities of the arc.
2. PILOT STATION LAT 22º 11.9 N, LONG 91º 47.0 E
3. ANCHORAGE “A” LAT 22º 14.0 N, LONG 91º 44.0 E
4. ANCHORAGE “B” LAT 22º 12.0 N, LONG 91º 43.9 E
5. ANCHORAGE “C” LAT 22º 11.0 N, LONG 91º 47.12 E
6. KUTUBDIA ANCHORAGE LAT 21º 52.8 N, LONG 91º 41.5 E



      • BERTH WISE DETAILS.
        SL NAME OF BERTH LOA(M) F.W DRAFT (M) REMARKS
        01 MAIN JETTY BERTH 2-5 186.00 8.55 GENERAL BERTH
        02 MAIN JETTY – 6 186.00 8.55 CONTAINER BERTH
        03 MAINJETTY 7-8-9 186.00 8.55 GENERAL BERTH
        04 MAIN JETTY 10-13 186.00 8.55 CONTAINER BERTH
        05 MPB / CCT 1-3 TOTAL 450.00 9.14 CONTAINER BERTH
        06 NEW MOORING CONRAINER TERMINAL-1 (NCT) 186.00 9.14 CONTAINER BERTH HEAVY PROJECT CARGO AND ALSO OTHER BULK / BAG CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL BE AT OVER SIDE ONLY.
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-2 186.00 9.14
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-3 186.00 9.14
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-4 186.00 9.00
        NEW MOORING CONTAINER TERMINAL-5 186.00 9.00
        07 CEMENT CLINKER JETTY -1 147.00 9.15 CEMENT CLINKER BERTH AND ALSO THER CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL AT OVER SIDE ONLY.
        CEMENT CLINKER JETTY-2 167.00 7.90
        CEMENT CLINKER JETTY-3 158.50 8.55
        08 GSJ 186.00 9.15 GOVT.WHEAT
        09 T.S.P (1) 175.25 7.90 ROCK PHOSPHATE BERTH AND OTHER CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL BE AT OVER SIDE ONLY
        T.S.P (2) 143.40 8.25
        10 MOORING RM/3 182.90 7.60 OIL TANKER PRIVATE PARTY BERTH
        MOORING RM/4 150.00 9.15 OIL TANKER PERIVATE PARTY
        11 D.O.J – 5 186.00 9.15 BPC TANKER VESSEL
        D.O.J -6 186.00 9.15 BPC TANKER VESSEL
        D.O.J-7 186.00 9.15 BPC TANKER VESSEL
        12 DRY DOCK JETTY ( DOCKING) 182.00 5.00 REPAIRING
        13 DDJ 1-2 TOTAL 302.00 7.00 REPAIRING AND HEAVY CGO LIFTING
        14 MOORING RM-8 186.00 8.00 OIL TANKER PRIVATE PARTY
        MOORING RM-9 186.00 8.00 FOR REPAIR VESSEL
        MOORING RM-10 145.00 7.50 FOR REPAIR VESSEL
        15 SM-10 ( MOORING BERGE ) 20/30 3.00 PROJECT BERGE
        16 CUFL 186.00 8.50 PHOSPHERIC ACID, UREA BERTH AND OTHER CARGO VESSEL CAN BERTH BUT DELIVERY WILL BE AT OVER SIDE ONLY
        17 KAFCO (U) 186.00 9.15 FOR EXPORT UREA
        KAFCO (A) 186.00 9.15 FOR EXPORT AMMONIA



    • SILO JETTY DETAILS.
      Silo jetty (only one berth for discharging only government food cargo). At silo permissible L.O.A 186 M / Beam: No Restriction / Air Draft : 52 M / F.W Draft : 9.15 M subject to day’s permissible in ward F/water draft.



    • MAIN JETTY DETAILS.
      Main jetty permissible L.O.A 186 M / Beam : No Restriction / Air Draft : 52 M / F.W Draft : 8.55 M subject to days permissible in ward F/water draft.



    • AT OUTER ANCHORAGE DETAILS.
      At outer anchorage there is no restriction about LOA / Beam / Air Draft of the vessels, but F/water draft limitation asf:-

        1. (a) “A” Anchorage 11.0 / 11.50 M ( subject to days permissible inward tide/draft)

        1. (b) “B” Anchorage 10.0 M

        1. (c) “C” Anchorage 8.55 to 9.0 M

      1. (d) Kutubdia Anchorage permissible draft 15/16 M
    • VESSEL ARRIVING INFORMATION.
      All incoming vessel will proceed from Kutubdia to Alpha Anchorage(Chittagong Outer Anchorage) by following BA chart no. 84 and current Admiralty Tide Tables(ATT). Also vessel is advised to contact port control by VHF channel 12/16 while vessel proceeds from Kutubdia to Alpha “A” Anchorage. Chittagong port control will guide in all respects round the clock. Vessel is advised to proceed from Kutubdia in such a time to arrive Alpha Anchorage at the time of high water tide of “Alpha” Anchorage. HW at A anchorage is approximately one hour before the HW time given in the ATT for Chittagong port. Vessel is advised to start to proceed from Kutubdia approximately 3 hrs before the high water of Alpha Anchorage.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

But Payra will have more siltation problem than Chittagong. Just dredging to 10m depth uniformly is supposed to cost $2B and that's the preliminary estimate.

sea_port.jpg


deep_sea_port_1.jpg


rs2100_postnik_yakovlev_hoofd.jpg
rs6674_p2080306.jpg


But yes - I get your point on the shallowness of the continental shelf and the littoral areas around the port of Chittagong.

Maybe the best area for a deep sea shipbuilding yard is around Sonadia peninsula or outer shore of Kutubdia Island where they have naturally deep draft of 14 to 17 meters.

Look at this bathymetry (depth) chart for Kutubdia (lowermost island on the right) where depth is more than 14 or so meters.

1-s2.0-S0272771416303791-gr5_lrg.jpg


http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0272771416303791#fig5

And last but not least this one. Kutubdia's appropriate location for a large shipyard becomes crystal clear now...

coastal+water.jpg




Yes those dredging projects will definitely pay dividends.

nice post with lots of details....

but I have some basic questions -
1. if we get a deep-sea port, would that mean that most of the ships that come to Bangladesh would directly download on a jetty?
2. we would no longer require to send ships to Colombo or Klang or Singapore to fetch our containers left there by bigger ships?
3. so, we can rely more on our own ships to ship our goods rather than spending $6bn+ on shipping per year, thereby putting huge pressure on foreign reserves?
 
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nice post with lots of details....

but I have some basic questions -
1. if we get a deep-sea port, would that mean that most of the ships that come to Bangladesh would directly download on a jetty?
2. we would no longer require to send ships to Colombo or Klang or Singapore to fetch our containers left there by bigger ships?
3. so, we can rely more on our own ships to ship our goods rather than spending $6bn+ on shipping per year, thereby putting huge pressure on foreign reserves?

Answers to your questions (note hyperlinks):

1. Short answer is yes.
2. Correct.
3. Partially yes, with some reservations.

Right now it takes a special type of low-draft (about 8m fully loaded) container ship to berth at Chittagong port given its low draft jetties (around 10m draft). These are known in the trade as 'Chittagong Max' vessels or also known as the popular Zhejiang 2700 design (for 2700 TEU capacity and about...). Maersk and other shipping line order these vessels for most Bay of Bengal ports like CTG and Yangon (Sittwe) because draft is low around these ports. Here is Maersk ship 'MCC Chittagong', a vessel of this class. This one carries containers back and forth between Singapore/Port Klang and Chittagong, sort of doing semi-lighterage duties.

http://www.marinetraffic.com/en/ais...i:477636300/imo:9761023/vessel:MCC_CHITTAGONG
showphoto.aspx

These are roughly 37157 DWT displacement ships.

However large container-carrier vessels with normal draft requirements routinely exceed 10m draft call at transshipment ports like Singapore and Colombo. They cannot come to Chittagong so garments and other exporters have to incur extra shipping charge.

Supramax is the largest of the vessels with a size of around 50,000 to 60,000 DWT and can be as long as 200 meters or 656 feet. These are high draft vessels so about 20+meters draft. These have to anchor in outer anchorage or Kutubdia island south of CTG port. If we build the deep-water port at Sonadia or Kutubdia, those ports will be able to accommodate these classes of ships.

Handymax vessels are slightly smaller and have a displacement of 40,000 to 50,000 DWT. These ships are usually at least 150 meters or 492 feet. These are the bulker vessels that are being discussed in this thread and won't normally be able to berth directly in CTG if they are of normal high-draft design (draft about 12 to 15m). However these new builds in China will probably be built to low-draft design (under 8m) and will be able to berth in Chittagong.

Handysize are even smaller-sized ships with a capacity ranging between 15,000 and 35,000 DWT. These vessels are ideal for small as well as large ports, and so make up the majority of ocean cargo vessels in the world. These are OK to berth in Chittagong port jetties directly if they are under 20,000 DWT (around 8~9m draft).

See images below for guidelines for drafts for various TEU classes.

biggest-container-ship-evolution-1.png


In the neighborhood, Chennai and Visakhapatnam ports have natural deep-draft ports and harbors so they can accommodate much larger container vessels, thereby lowering shipping costs for their users.

http://www.maritimegateway.com/news/dp-world-chennai-hosts-14-8-metres-deep-draft-vessel/

http://www.maritimegateway.com/news/cma-cgms-cimex-2e-iex-service-makes-maiden-call-visakhapatnam/
 
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