The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

CREWS BEGIN NEW PHASE AT BUSY STATE PORT,

Work began last week on dredging of outer channel.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Crews have started a new phase in the deepening of the Savannah River, the nearly $1 billion project to allow bigger ships to pass with fewer restrictio­ns to the state’s bustling main port.

The Army Corps of Engineers said work started last week on the final segment of dredging in the river’s outer channel. The corps Monday news release said contractor Great Lakes Dredge and Dock Co. will employ up to five “hopper dredges,” which can be used in the colder months before spring.

The hopper dredges, the corps said, are faster-moving and are less likely to encounter wildlife during the winter

and early spring.

The corps will start the deepening of the river’s inner harbor from Fort Pulaski to the Georgia Ports Authority’s Garden City Terminal after further environmen­tal work and mitigation, the release said.

“This major push by the Great Lakes Dredge and Dock

Company will complete the deepening from Fort Pulaski and ending nearly 20 miles into the Atlantic Ocean to 47 feet,” said Spencer Davis, project manager for the deepening project. “This is the first step to allow the larger, neo-Panamax container ships to enter the harbor with fewer tidal restrictio­ns.”

The harbor and river deepening is Georgia’s biggest economic developmen­t project. The ships are limited by tides and can’t make their way to the port fully loaded at the current depth.

Corps officials announced earlier this year that the project would take two years longer and cost 38 percent more to complete due to constructi­on cost increases and contract bidding. Constructi­on work is now scheduled to wrap up in January 2022.

Georgia’s ports enjoyed a record breaking year for cargo in the past fiscal year, buoyed in part by a wave of larger ships passing through the Panama Canal. The state’s ports moved 3.85 million twenty-foot equivalent (TEU) container units in the 12 months ended in June, up 6.7 percent from the prior year. Total tonnage grew by 8.3 percent.

 ?? U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS ?? The dredge ship Padre Island of Great Lakes Dock and Dredge Co. works on the Savannah River channel deepening in March 2016.
U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS The dredge ship Padre Island of Great Lakes Dock and Dredge Co. works on the Savannah River channel deepening in March 2016.

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