Fremantle Outer Harbour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CountryAustralia
Coordinates32°12′35″S 115°46′06″E / 32.20975°S 115.76822°E / -32.20975; 115.76822
Opened1955
Fremantle Outer Harbour
Location of the jetties of Fremantle Outer Harbour
Bulk carrier Yangze 16 at Kwinana Bulk Jetty
Interactive map of Fremantle Outer Harbour
Location
CountryAustralia
LocationFremantle, Western Australia
Coordinates32°12′35″S 115°46′06″E / 32.20975°S 115.76822°E / -32.20975; 115.76822
Details
Opened1955
Owned byFremantle Ports
CBH Group
Alcoa
BP
Statistics
Website
www.fremantleports.com.au Edit this at Wikidata

The Fremantle Outer Harbour is the part of Fremantle Harbour located in the Cockburn Sound, Western Australia. Fremantle Harbour consists of the Inner Harbour, which is situated on the mouth of the Swan River; and the Outer Harbour, which is 20 kilometres (12 mi) to the south. It is managed by Fremantle Ports.

The Outer Harbour's creation dates back to the Stephenson-Hepburn Report and was initiated in 1955.

The Fremantle Outer Harbour consists of, from north to south, the Alcoa Jetty, the Kwinana Bulk Terminal, the BP Oil Refinery Jetty, the Kwinana Bulk Jetty and the CBH Grain Jetty.[1]

Of these, the Kwinana Bulk Terminal and the Kwinana Bulk Jetty are operated by Fremantle Ports and serve for the import and export of bulk cargoes and liquids, among them iron ore, coal, cement clink, gypsum, liquefied natural gas, petroleum and fertiliser. The other three facilities are privately operated.[2]

The Outer Harbour deepwater bulk facilities at Kwinana were first developed in 1955, as part of the Stephenson-Hepburn Report,[3] to service the Kwinana industrial area, and saw rapid expansion in the 1960s and 1970s.[4]

The Kwinana industrial area itself was established in 1952 with the Oil Refinery Industry Act 1952 and an agreement between the Government of Western Australia and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company to establishment an oil refinery at Kwinana. Prior to this, Western Australia was the least industrialised state in mainland Australia, a matter of economic concern to the state government.[3]

Facilities

The harbour facilities from north to south are:

  • Alcoa Jetty
  • Kwinana Bulk Terminal
  • BP Oil Refinery Jetty
  • Kwinana Bulk Jetty
  • CBH Grain Jetty

Alcoa Jetty

Bulk carrier at the Alcoa Jetty

Alcoa Jetty, operated by Alcoa, serves for the export of alumina and the import of caustic deliveries.[1]

The jetty is located at Naval Base and accommodates ships unloading bulk caustic soda and loading refined alumina. The jetty is equipped with a belt conveyor system specially designed for the loading of refined bulk alumina and serves the Kwinana Alumina Refinery, commissioned in 1963.[5][6]

Kwinana Bulk Terminal

Bulk carrier at the Kwinana Bulk Terminal

Kwinana Bulk Terminal, operated by Fremantle Ports, serves for the export and import of bulk cargoes such as coal, gypsum and cement clinker, operating from the KBB2 jetty.[1]

The jetty, almost 500 metres (1,600 ft) long, is home to Kwinana Bulk Berth 2 (KBB2), and facilitates ships loading and unloading bulk products such as cement clinker, mineral sands, silica sands, coal, iron ore, bauxite, gypsum, nut coke, slag and various other commodities. The commodities are stockpiled in sheds and in the open. The jetty has two ship unloaders, Number 4, with a minimum rate of 400 tonnes (880 thousand pounds) per hour, and Number 5, with a minimum rate of 1,200 tonnes (2,600 thousand pounds) per hour. The overall conveying system has a maximum rate of 1,500 tonnes (3,300 thousand pounds) per hour and is connected to rail through standard and narrow-gauge to conveyor.[5]

The jetty was originally owned by BHP as part of its local steel works but sold to Fremantle Ports in 2002.[7] BHP had opened a steel rolling mill at Kwinana in 1956 but closed this operation in 1995. Between 1968 and 1982, the company also operated a blast furnace at Kwinana. The BHP Kwinana Nickel Refinery opened in 1970.[3]

BP Oil Refinery Jetty

Tankers at the BP Oil Refinery Jetty

BP Oil Refinery Jetty, operated by BP originally servicing the nearby BP oil refinery facilities,[1] is now an import-only terminal.[citation needed]

The jetty consists of three berths, Number 1, Number 2 and Number 3, where numbers 1 and 2 can hold tankers of a length of up to 229 metres (751 ft) and number 3 can hold a tanker of up to 274 metres (899 ft) in length.[5]

Kwinana Bulk Jetty

Bulk carrier at the Number 4 Kwinana bulk berth, Kwinana Bulk Jetty

Like the Kwinana Bulk Terminal, the Kwinana Bulk Jetty is operated by Fremantle Ports. Two jetties, called KBB3 and KBB4, serve the export and import of various bulk commodities such as sulphur and fertiliser.[1]

The two berths, Kwinana Bulk Berth 3 (KBB3) and Kwinana Bulk Berth 4 (KBB4), are designed to accommodate ships unloading both liquid and solid bulk and can accommodate vessels of up to 275 metres (902 ft) long.[5]

CBH Grain Jetty

Bulk carrier at the CBH Grain Jetty

CBH Grain Jetty, operated by CBH Group, functions as Western Australia's primary grain export facility.[1]

The single-berth jetty can load grain at up to 5,000 tonnes (11 million pounds) per hour and has a berth length of 291 metres (955 ft).[5]

The CBH Grain Terminal opened in 1976. In 2016–17, the facility exported 6.7 million tonnes (15 billion pounds) of grains.[3]

Former facilities

BHP Jetty Number 1

The derelict BHP Jetty Number 1, now partially demolished

Just north of KBB2 lies the derelict BHP Jetty Number 1. Both[clarification needed] were once owned by BHP, with jetty number 1 having been disused since the mid-1980s while jetty number 2 was sold by BHP in 2002.[8]

The land section of the jetty was demolished in June and July 2021, and only the sea sections of the jetty now remains.[as of?]

Proposed expansion

References

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