Port of Alaska

Port of Alaska
Oblique aerial view of the Port of Alaska in 1999
Map
Location of Port of Alaska in Alaska
Location
CountryUnited States
LocationKnik Arm, Cook Inlet, Pacific Ocean
Coordinates61°14′25″N 149°53′10″W / 61.24028°N 149.88611°W / 61.24028; -149.88611[1]
UN/LOCODEUSANC[2]
Details
Opened1961
Operated byAnchorage Port Commission
Owned byMunicipality of Anchorage
Port DirectorStephen Ribuffo
Deputy Port DirectorSharen Walsh, P.E.
Director,
Finance & Administration
Cheryl Beckham
Statistics
Annual cargo tonnageIncrease 4,704,374 (2020) [3]
Annual TEUs[A]280848 (2006)
Website
www.portofalaska.com

The Port of Alaska[4] (POA) is a deep-water port in Anchorage, Alaska, with three bulk carrier berths, two petroleum berths, and one barge berth. The name was changed from "Port of Anchorage" to the "Port of Alaska" in 2017.[4] It is an enterprise department of the Municipality of Anchorage. It is distinguished from other types of municipal departments largely because it generates enough revenue to support its operations without being a burden to Anchorage property tax payers, and it also pays a fee-in-lieu of taxes to help run city government.

The POA provides critical transportation infrastructure to the citizens of Anchorage and to a majority of the citizens of the State of Alaska both within and beyond the Railbelt. Seventy-four percent of all the waterborne freight and ninety-five percent of the refined petroleum products entering the state through Southcentral Alaska ports is shipped through the Port of Alaska. This includes 100 percent of the jet fuel supplied to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson and approximately 66 percent of the jet fuel for Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.

The Port Director is appointed by the Mayor and reports to the Municipal Manager. There is a nine-person Commission, also appointed by the Mayor, responsible for promulgating the Port's terminal tariff. Despite its enterprise distinction, the Port acts as a standard municipal department with the Anchorage Assembly approving its annual budget, contracts, tariffs, and leases. Additionally, needed legal, financial and other day-to-day support are provided, for a fee, by the appropriate general government departments acting as an extension of the Port's staff. All Port operating activities are subject to municipal code.

  1. ^ "Port of Alaska, Anchorage". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  2. ^ "UNLOCODE (US) - UNITED STATES". service.unece.org. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Ten Year Tonnage Summary". Port of Alaska. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  4. ^ a b Carpenter, Dan. "Anchorage Assembly gives the Port of Anchorage a new name". www.ktuu.com. Retrieved 2019-05-15.