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The Port of Morehead City is a breakbulk and bulk facility located four miles from the Atlantic Ocean. The port is equipped with nine berths and multiple gantry cranes. Storage offerings include a dry-bulk facility with a 220,000-ton capacity warehouse and a 177,000-square-foot warehouse for housing commodities like rubber, paper, steel, and ...
The Port of Wilmington may refer to: Port of Wilmington (Delaware), a port facility in Wilmington, Delaware, USA; Port of Wilmington (North Carolina), a port facility ...
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The N.C. State Ports Authority says it will “recognize any and all work stoppages,” as contract negotiations falter.
Conceptual designs for the North Carolina International Terminal called for a high-density, automated container terminal capable of serving 12,000-TEU vessels with at least a 50-foot draft (the existing navigation channel serving the Port of Wilmington in the Wilmington Harbor has a dredge depth of 42 (+/-) feet).
What is the impact of a port strike? The ports affected by the strike handle more than 68% of all containerized exports in the U.S. and roughly 56% of containerized imports, according to industry ...
Aerial view of Wilmington Marine Terminal showing cargo-handling facilities, ca. 1920s. The first development of a marine terminal in Wilmington was completed in 1923 at the location of the current Port of Wilmington. A number of improvements and expansions were made to the port over the course of the following decades.
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