Port of Sevastopol explained

Port of Sevastopol
Country:Ukraine[1]
Location:Sevastopol
Opened:1875
Owner:Sea/River Fleet Administration (government)
Type:Natural/Artificial
Leadershiptitle:Chief
Blankdetailstitle1:Chief engineer
Blankstatstitle1:employees
Website:www.morport.sebastopol.ua

right|200pxSevastopol Marine Trade Port (SMTP) is a port in Sevastopol. It is located mainly at the Bay of Sevastopol, and at smaller bays around the Heracles peninsula. The port infrastructure is fully integrated with the city of Sevastopol and naval bases of the Russian Navy and the Black Sea Fleet.

The port had previously been under the sovereignty of Ukraine following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 and a formal partition treaty was signed by Ukraine and Russia in 1997. Portions of the port were owned by the private sector.. The port came under full Russian control when Russia occupied the Crimean peninsula in early 2014 after a highly criticized referendum known as the 2014 Crimean status referendum.[2]

History

A settlement was formed at the Sevastopol port in June 1783 as a base for a naval squadron under the name Akhtiar[3] (White Cliff),[4] by Rear Admiral Thomas MacKenzie (Foma Fomich Makenzi), a native Scot in Russian service; soon after Russia annexed the Crimean Khanate. Five years earlier, Alexander Suvorov ordered that earthworks be erected along the harbor and Russian troops be placed there. In February 1784, Catherine the Great ordered Grigory Potemkin to build a fortress there and call it Sevastopol. The realization of the initial building plans fell to Captain Fyodor Ushakov who in 1788 was named commander of the port and of the Black Sea squadron.[5] It became an important naval base and later a commercial seaport. In 1797, under an edict issued by Emperor Paul I, the military stronghold was again renamed to Akhtiar. Finally, on April 29 (May 10), 1826, the Russian Senate returned the city's name to Sevastopol.

During World War II, the port of Sevastopol withstood intensive bombardment by the Germans in 1941–42, supported by their Italian and Romanian allies during the Battle of Sevastopol.

The port was leased to Russia on a long-term lease after the devolution of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

In early March 2014, during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russian sailors scuttled several naval vessels to act as blockships at the entrance to Donuzlav Bay and the port of Sevastapol, in an attempt to prevent Ukrainian navy ships berthed in the port from gaining access to the Black Sea. Ships sunk included the hull of the naval cruiser Ochakov and a diving support vessel of BM-416-class (approximately).[6] [7]

Location and defined borders

See also: Bay of Sevastopol.

The territory of the port was defined by the declaration of Cabinet of Ukraine on October 25, 2002 "About aquatorium of the Sevastopol Marine Trade Port".[8] The territory defined was limited by lines that outstretch from extreme points of the Sevastopol city administration border at the Black Sea coast perpendicularly to the coastline and allotted water area,[8] except:

Divisions

Passenger terminal

Passenger terminal is located at the pier #143. Along with terminal there is a building of customs.

Cargo district

There is a cargo district located at the eastern end of the Bay of Sevastopol near the city of Inkerman (Little Inkerman) and mouth of the Chorna River. It consists of two transloading complexes PK-1 and PK-2.

Transloading complex #1 (PK-1) has capabilities to handle transferring cargo from water transport onto ground transport such as automotive and rail. The complex is specialized to handle cabotage sand, scrap metal (ferrous and non-ferrous metals) in bulk, and coal export.Transloading complex #2 (PK-2) has an area of 47883m2. It is based around the pier #56 that has a length of 112 running meters and depth of 8.25m (27.07feet).

South Sevastopol

South Sevastopol is a ship maintenance facility.[9] The factory has a freight-handling complex, ship maintenance shop, own design bureau, builds yachts. It also rents out various vessels such as floating cranes, tugboats, others.

Fleet

Ships and fleets based in the Port of Sevastopol. The list does not include former fleets among which are fleets of Atlantika State Fishing Company[10] and others. Also fleet of the Yalta Marine Trade Port is assigned to the Port of Sevastopol.

Sevastopol Marine Trade Port

National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Strategic value

The Port of Sevastopol is considered a key hold for maritime routes between the Black Sea and the Sea of Marmara, and, therefore, the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The port is one of the few warm deepwater ports available to Russia in the Black Sea. Russia leased the port from Ukraine, until its annexation in 2014. Access to the port is considered one of the main factors that sparked the 2014 Crimean crisis between Ukraine and Russia, and Russia's subsequent military intervention on Crimea.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Disputed territory; occupied by Russia
  2. Web site: A treaty on accession of the Republic of Crimea and Sebastopol to the Russian Federation. Unofficial English translation with little commentary . Anatoliy Pronin . Academia.edu . 2014-04-02 . 2022-02-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220208182718/https://www.academia.edu/6481091 . dead .
  3. Book: http://leksika.com.ua/19111014/ure/sevastopol . Sevastopol . . Leksika . .
  4. Book: http://bse.sci-lib.com/article100495.html . Севастополь (Sevastopol) . . .
  5. Web site: Основание и развитие Севастополя (Osnovaniye i razvitiye Sevastopolya) . Foundation and development of Sevastopol . Sevastopol.info . 2007-05-28. 2010-04-26 . ru .
  6. http://navaltoday.com/2014/03/06/russia-sinks-ship-to-block-ukrainian-navy-ships/ Russia sinks ship to block Ukrainian Navy ships
  7. Web site: Russians Scuttle Another Ship to Block Ukrainian Fleet . 7 March 2014 . 7 March 2014 .
  8. http://www.sevastopol-tour.com/port_sev.php Port of Sevastopol
  9. http://www.yusev.com.ua/ Official website of South Sevastopol
  10. http://noviny.narod.ru/VV-00000290.html About how fishing industry of Ukraine was liquidated