Port of Rijeka | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Croatia |
Location | Rijeka |
Coordinates | 45°19′56″N 14°25′17″E / 45.332358°N 14.421358°E |
UN/LOCODE | HRRJK[1] |
Details | |
Opened | 13th century |
Operated by | Port of Rijeka Authority Luka Rijeka d.d. Jadranska vrata d.d. Jadranski naftovod d.d. Rijeka Gateway d.o.o. |
Land area | 150 ha (370 acres) |
No. of berths | 58 + 2 oil terminal berths |
Draft depth | 29.5 m.[2] |
Employees | 635 (2020)[3] |
Director of the Port Authority | Denis Vukorepa |
Luka Rijeka d.d. chairman | Duško Grabovac |
Jadranska vrata d.d. chairman | Emmanuel Papagiannakis |
Jadranski naftovod d.d. chairman | Stjepan Adanić |
Statistics | |
Vessel arrivals | 4376 (2008)[N 1] |
Annual cargo tonnage | 12.7 million tonnes (2022) |
Annual container volume | 520,866 TEU (2022) |
Passenger traffic | 175,961 (2022) |
Annual revenue | 305 million kuna (2019)[4] |
Net income | 19,5 million kuna (2019)[5] |
Website www.portauthority.hr |
The Port of Rijeka (Croatian: Luka Rijeka, IPA: [lǔːka rijěːka]) is a seaport in Rijeka, Croatia, located on the shore of the Kvarner Gulf in the Adriatic Sea. The first records of the port date to 1281. It was the main port of the Kingdom of Hungary in the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, of Yugoslavia between World War II and 1991, and of Croatia after its independence. Today, it is the largest port in Croatia with a cargo throughput of 13.6 million tonnes (2020), mostly oil, general cargo and bulk cargo, and 344,091 Twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs).[6]
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