Kolkata is the oldest major port in
the country. But the nucleus of the present day Kolkata Port lies
much earlier - with the grant of trading rights to the British
Settlement in Eastern India by the Moghal Emperor Aurangzeb. The
city of Kolkata, has a synergistic
linkage with the port.
In course of time the power to rule this vast
country passed from the East India Company to the British Crown.
The affairs of the Port were brought under the administrative
control of the Government with the appoinment of a Port
Commission in 1870.
The
Kolkata Port was initially conceived to promote and protect the
British colonial interest. But with the advent of freedom in 1947,
the Port was called upon to play the opposite role to champion
the national cause. The Port took over the responsibility in the
wake of the aftermath of Second World War and the partition of
the country.
The Port which was once considered the most
important port in the country still remains the premier port
which has been rightly called the gateway to Eastern India and is
the guiding factor to trade and commerce of vast hinterland
comprising the entire Eastern India including Bihar and Eastern
Uttar Pradesh and the two land-locked Himalayan Kingdoms of Nepal
and Bhutan.
The
Commissioners for the Port of Kolkata ran the port till January
1975 when Major Port Trusts Act, 1963, came into force. The
history of Kolkata Port has been a continuous story of struggle
and success - it's a saga of uninterrupted development,
improvement and achievements. It is not for nothing that it has
been able to surpass every target set for it and set all-time
records in almost every walk of port activity. It could attain
this only because of its professionalism and commitment to
perfectionism. In the recent past, Kolkata Port has been
adjudged as the best managed port in the country.
Despite its being 126 miles away from the sea,
Kolkata is, by far, the best choice for eastern gateway to this
continental-country. Kolkata Port Trust remains one of the
pioneering and most promising ports of India. It commands a vast
hinterland that comprises almost half of the Indian states (whole
of the eastern and north-eastern regions) and the two
neighbouring countries - the Himalayan Kingdoms of Nepal and
Bhutan. It has two dock systems - Kolkata Dock System at Kolkata
with the oil wharves at Baj Baj and Haldia Dock Complex at Haldia
- have a combination of facilities with a lot of attractive
packages. We have
the largest dry dock facilities in
India.
the Cheapest container rate at Haldia.
the lowest pre-berthing detention of
Vessels at Kolkata Dock System.
the most modern Vessel Traffic
Management System, allied navigational aids.
The differential Global Positioning System has
been introduced to replace the existing Syledis network. This is
going to make hydrographic surveys more precise and convenient as
well.
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