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The following is a list of the ports in Spain declared to be of "general interest" and thus, under the exclusive competence of the General Administration of the State. [1] They are operated by 28 different port authorities , which are coordinated in turn by Puertos del Estado , a State-owned company.
Ports and harbours of the Spanish Atlantic coast (1 C, 19 P) M. Ports and harbours of the Spanish Mediterranean coast (13 P) P. Port authorities in Spain (1 P)
Ports of the State (Spanish: Puertos del Estado) is a State-owned company responsible for the management of Spanish state-owned ports. The company executes the port policy of the Government and coordinates and controls the efficiency of the port system, made up of 28 Port authorities that manage the 46 ports of general interest.
It is a commercial, fishing and passenger port. Primarily a transshipment port, its position near the Strait of Gibraltar and key east–west shipping routes establishes it as one of the busiest transshipment hubs in the world. [citation needed] It competes with Tanger-Med for the local transshipment market.
It is the fourth nationwide port in freight traffic behind Algeciras, Valencia and Barcelona. [2] [3] It occupies the eighth place in relation to the number of cruises. [2] 60% of exports and the 80% of imports from the Region of Murcia are made through the port of Cartagena. [4] More than 40% of the tourism that Cartagena receives is made by ...
The Port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife stretches from the fishing dock of San Andrés until muelle de Hondura, with an area of about twelve kilometers, [3] this makes the port more extension of the Canary Islands. In 2016, the Port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife was included among the three major ports in the world [4] for cruise traffic by Seatrade ...
The Port of Huelva is a cargo and fishing port located off the Spanish southwestern coast, belonging to the municipalities of Huelva and Palos de la Frontera. With a total annual traffic capacity of 33.8 million tonnes, it is the second biggest port in Andalusia after the Port of Algeciras .
It is managed by the port authority of the same name. [5] It has a dock for cruise ships, the Muelle de las Delicias. [6] The dársena del Batán comprises two docks: the Centenario Dock (featuring a container terminal, a ro-ro ramp) and the Batán Norte Dock (also with a ro-ro ramp), both of them prepared for the charge and discharge of solid bulk. [7]