East China's Shanghai Port, one of the world's largest harbors, concluded last month with a container throughput of over 4.31 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), hitting a record high for a single month and breaking the single day-night container throughput record with 158,858 TEUs on August 19, according to Shanghai International Port (Group) Co., Ltd. (SIPG).
It also remained the world's busiest container port in 2020 for an 11th consecutive year with a new record of 43.5 million TEUs.
Part of this is thanks to the Yangshan Deep Water Port.
Located in Hangzhou Bay, it has the world's largest automated container terminal, which started operation in December 2017.
With an area of 2.23 million square meters and a shoreline of 2,350 meters, it can handle 4 million TEUs per year.
But busy as it is, there are hardly any workers to be seen there, thanks to a fully automatic management and control system developed by SIPG, which helps realize a whole-process intelligent operation, including container loading and unloading, horizontal transportation and yard loading and unloading.
Connected with the major data and information platforms of Shanghai Port, the system organizes on-site production efficiently through a scheduling module and collaborative process control system. Terminal operators who used to work on site now work inside the control room, where they can do all their work in front of a computer screen.
Self-developed software makes container shifting faster, easier
Shanghai was ranked in July among the world's top three shipping hubs for 2021, alongside Singapore and London, according to the Xinhua-Baltic International Shipping Center Development Index Report.
And it has vowed to build a world-class international shipping center by 2025 – efficient, fully functional, open, integrated, green, intelligent and capable of providing strong support – according to its 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025).
The automated container terminal is part of this.
It harbors seven berths and can dock container ships as large as 200,000 tonnes.
"We promise our customers that we can complete the loading and unloading of 5000 TEUs within 16 to 24 hours," Huang Xiusong, director of the technology center at SIPG, was quoted by Xinhua as saying.
Properly arranging the transporting process requires taking every detail into consideration, such as which area a ship should dock, how much machinery is needed to unload the cargo and where it should start unloading, from the sides or the middle, Huang added.
The intelligent system, developed by the team itself, has now replaced manual labor in repetitive operations.
Read More at https://news.cgtn.com/news/2021-09-17/Homegrown-smart-brain-contributes-to-a-worker-free-port-in-E-China-13CFVLzJB7i/index.html
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