Ports of the Baltic Sea

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There are over 200 ports in the Baltic Sea. When only those ports that handle minimum of 50,000 tonnes of cargo annually, and where at least part of this cargo is international, are taken into account the number of ports reaches approximately 190. In 2008, the total amount of cargo handled in the Baltic Sea ports amounted to 822.4 million tonnes, which is 0.4 per cent less than in 2007. Primorsk, Saint Petersburg and Tallinn were the biggest ports in the Baltic Sea in 2008. Together the three top ports handled over one fifth of total cargo volumes in the Baltic Sea in 2008.[1]

This table lists statistics (2002) (Świnoujście, Szczecin and Helsinki - 2004, Lübeck and Rostock - 2005, Gdynia, Klaipėda, Gdańsk, Riga, Liepāja - 2010) for the major ports of the Baltic Sea. Container traffic is given in terms of Twenty-foot equivalent units of cargo.

Authority City Tons Containers TEU Passengers Notes
Copenhagen Malmö Port Denmark Copenhagen / Sweden Malmö 18,000,000[2] 194,000[2] 1,300,000[2]
Port of Gdańsk Poland Gdańsk 35,913,639[3] 511,876[3] 164,331[3] 2015
Port of Gdynia Poland Gdynia 14,735,000[4] 485,255[4][5] 460,231[5][6] 2012
Port of HaminaKotka Finland Kotka 5,157,633 626,791 2,000 2013 [7]
Port of Helsingborg Sweden Helsingborg 7,107,000 8,339,000[8]
Port of Helsinki Finland Helsinki 11,410,000 430,431 11,169,000 2015 [9]
Kaliningrad Sea Commercial Port Russia Kaliningrad 2,719,000 21,313 0
Port of Kiel Germany Kiel 5,089,797 25,870 1,623,741 2014[10]
Port of Klaipėda Lithuania Klaipėda 38,440,000 450,000 321,000 2015[11]
Port of Liepāja Latvia Liepāja 7,431,499 - 33,242 2012
Lübecker Hafen-Gesellschaft Germany Lübeck 27,590,000 55,677 134,000
Port of Luleå Sweden Luleå 7,000,000 10,000
Port of Norrköping Sweden Norrköping 3,940,000 80,000 2011[12]
Port of Oxelösund Sweden Oxelösund 7,539,000
Police Port Poland Police, Poland 2,445,500[5] - 23[5][6]
Port of Pori Finland Pori 5,531,953 61,048
Port of Primorsk Russia Primorsk 59,606,100 - - 2015[13]
Port of Rauma Finland Rauma 6,320,217 115,821
Freeport of Riga Latvia Riga 40,055,800 355,241 526,243 2015[14]
Rostock Port Germany Rostock 2,290,000 2,220,000
Port of Saint-Petersburg Russia Saint Petersburg 51,513,500 456,836 2015[15]
Ports of Stockholm Sweden Stockholm 4,705,000 36,400 9,184,000[8]
Szczecin and Swinoujscie Seaports Poland Świnoujście / Szczecin 19,215,900[16] 42,542[5] 930,022[5][6]
Port of Tallinn Estonia Tallinn 22,431,200 208,784 9,793,000 2015[17]
Port of Trelleborg Sweden Trelleborg 10,336,000 1,564,000[8]
Port of Turku Finland Turku 3,900,000 120,000 4,500,000
Free port of Ventspils Latvia Ventspils 26,206,000 - - 2014[18]
Port of Visby Sweden Visby 1,598,000[8]
Port of Ystad Sweden Ystad 1,913,000[8]

References

  1. Baltic Port List 2006 and 2008
  2. 1 2 3 Annual report from CMP 2008 (in English)
  3. 1 2 3 "Cargo statistics". Port of Gdańsk Authority. 2010. Retrieved 2011-05-13.
  4. 1 2 "Statystyki" (in Polish). Retrieved 2012-07-24.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Statistical yearbook of maritime economy (PDF). Warsaw, Szczecin: Central Statistical Office - Statistical Office in Szczecin. 2007. pp. 65, 86. ISSN 0867-082X.
  6. 1 2 3 international passenger traffic in seaport on ships of gross tonnage more than 100
  7. "Statistics produced by Finnish Port Association". Finnish Port Association. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 Trafikanalys Sjötrafik 2011 (see page 45) (Swedish)
  9. "Port Statistics 2015" (PDF). Port of Helsinki. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  10. Statistik, Port of Kiel.
  11. Cargo at Port of Klaipeda 2005.
  12. "Turnover within ports in Szczecin and Swinoujscie". Szczecin and Swinoujscie Seaports Authority. 2008. Retrieved 2009-04-22.
  13. Port of Tallinn Statistic 2013
  14. Free port of Ventspils authority. 2013 Summary
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