Baosteel, China's largest steel maker, has completed a project
to double the capacity of the Majishan Port near the estuary of the
Yangtze River, China's vital waterway.
The undertaking, dubbed the second-phase project of the Majishan
Port, includes establishments of berths that can accommodate ships
with 10,000 to 300,000 dwt (dead weight tonnage), and a
0.32-square-kilometer ore ground built on polders, according to
company sources.
The project, which was completed on Saturday, is expected to
boost the port's handling capacity from about 26 million tons to 50
million tons a year, sources said.
The Majishan Port, located on the Majishan island off east
China's Zhejiang Province, was China's first deep-water port built
on an island.
The first-phase project of the port, which became operational in
2002, was planned to ease iron ore imports for Baosteel and other
steel companies along the Yangtze River. It handled about 26.16
million tons of cargo in 2006.
Shanghai-listed Baosteel gained 8.16 billion yuan (US$1.1
billion) of net profits in the first half of this year, a growth of
80.21 percent over the same period of last year.
The company has been included in the Fortune 500 list for the
fourth straight year. It ranks 307th on the 2007 list of Fortune
500 companies and is the sixth among all steel companies that enter
the list.
(Xinhua News Agency October 29, 2007)