place

Port of Newcastle

Ports and harbours of New South WalesUse Australian English from March 2013
CSIRO ScienceImage 8217 A bulk carrier entering Port Hunter Newcastle New South Wales
CSIRO ScienceImage 8217 A bulk carrier entering Port Hunter Newcastle New South Wales

The Port of Newcastle is a major seaport in the city of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. It is the world's largest coal port.It is made up of facilities located at Port Hunter - Yohaaba in the Hunter River estuary. The port was the first commercial export port in Australia and is the world's busiest coal export port. Annual exports of coal from Newcastle exceeded A$15 billion in 2012–13. Newcastle berthed more than 2,200 ships a year in 2012–13.The port's harbourmaster is the Port Authority of New South Wales. Cargo facilities are operated by Port Waratah Coal Services and Newcastle Coal Infrastructure Group at Kooragang Island, as well as other operators at Mayfield, Carrington and Walsh Point. There are plans to build a cruise terminal. In April 2014 Premier Mike Baird and Treasurer Andrew Constance announced that a "a consortium which comprises Hastings Funds Management and Chinese state-owned China Merchants" had successfully bid $1.75 billion for a 98-year lease of the Port of Newcastle.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Port of Newcastle (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Port of Newcastle
Macquarie Pier, Newcastle-Maitland Newcastle

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Port of NewcastleContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -32.916666666667 ° E 151.8 °
placeShow on map

Address

Gun Emplacement

Macquarie Pier
2300 Newcastle-Maitland, Newcastle
New South Wales, Australia
mapOpen on Google Maps

CSIRO ScienceImage 8217 A bulk carrier entering Port Hunter Newcastle New South Wales
CSIRO ScienceImage 8217 A bulk carrier entering Port Hunter Newcastle New South Wales
Share experience

Nearby Places

SS Cawarra
SS Cawarra

The SS Cawarra was a paddle-steamer that sank on 12 July 1866 in Newcastle harbour, New South Wales, Australia sending sixty people to their deaths. The sinking was one of the worst maritime disasters in Australian history. Owned by the Australasian Steam Navigation Company, the Brisbane-bound passenger vessel had become caught in rough seas off the east coast of Australia during storms that sank 14 other ships and resulted in 77 deaths between Port Stephens in the north and Sydney in the south. As the ship entered Newcastle harbour to take shelter it was overwhelmed by huge waves and sank, bow first, before thousands of onlookers who had gathered along the harbour shoreline to watch the stricken passenger ship. Its wreckage was recovered and, after removal of items of value, it was dumped on the Oyster Bank. While only one passenger survived the sinking, 60 people were already dead. "Several hours later, the lighthouse-keeper sighted a survivor and with his assistant James Johnson, who had been the sole survivor of the Dunbar wreck, launched a boat and brought the man ashore... Ordinary seaman [Frederick V] Hedges had grabbed a plank as the ship sank and was eventually washed more dead than alive against a harbour buoy.": p46  The wreck today sits beneath the wreckage of three more vessels that have since foundered in the harbour. Along with other wrecks they were used in the construction of the Stockton breakwall where plaques commemorate the loss of each of the ships including the Cawarra.