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* Foreign Trade Foodstuffs Terminals
The Oi Marine Products and Foodstuffs Terminals, the Tsukishima Terminals and other specialized terminals have been set up to implement the effective handling of agricultural and marine products, becoming a major base of supply for such products throughout the Metropolitan area.
| Oi Marine Products Terminal >> |
* Oi Foodstuffs Terminal
The Oi Foodstuffs Terminal, with three berths already in operation, is
primarily involved in the handling of grain(wheat), fresh fruits and other
imported foodstuffs. |
* Oi Marine Products Terminal
This is a specialized marine products terminal, furnished with two berths accommodating 30,000-ton vessels and equipped to handle frozen seafood originating principally from the deep-sea of Africa, New Zealand and the northern seas. |
* Tsukishima Terminal
This is a fisheries base outfitted for specialization in marine products
backed up by a concentration of large-scale cold-storage warehouses. |
* Foreign Trade General Cargo Terminals
Though most general import and export cargo these days is shipped by container,
conventional freighters continue to be used effectivery for cargo not compatible
with containers or more readily shipped in bulk. At the Port, these conventional
cargo vessels are handled at the Odaiba Liner Terminal and others.
* Odaiba Liner Terminal
A key terminal for conventional freighters, these are nine berths in operation over its entire length of 1.8km, servicing up to 15,000-ton vessels conveying, indeed, a vast array of cargo, steel, machinery, industrial plants, lunber, paper, fruits and so forth. |
* Bulk Cargo Terminal of Inside-Central Breakwater Reclaimed Land
This is a public terminal primarily involved in handling coal, silica sand
and other bulk import cargo, and commenced operations in May 2000.
With a length of 240m and a depth of 12m, it is capable of accommodating
30,000-ton vessels. In addition, equipped with unloaders, conveyor belts
and other cargo-handling machinery. |
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