BEIJING: In the bridge crane operation center at Chongqing’s Guoyuan Port, Hu Wanqi and his colleagues are busy moving containers around the yard via a long-distance operation system.
The bridge crane operators stare at their screens, stacking, moving, loading and unloading containers using joysticks and a computer mouse.
“We work around the clock during the Spring Festival holiday to ensure smooth transportation at the port,” said Hu, the assistant director of the bridge crane operation department at Chongqing Guoyuan Container Terminal.
Situated on the upper reaches of the Yangtze River, Guoyuan Port is the largest container river port in the country. The comprehensive transportation hub includes railways, highways and waterways, and is home to 16 ship berths that can handle vessels that can carry as much as 5,000 metric tons of cargo.
The port, which has attracted 10.5 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) in investment, can each year handle 30 million tons of bulk cargo, and can facilitate as many as 1 million commercial vehicles each year to deliver or pick up cargo.
In 2023, the port had a container throughput of 990,000 twenty-foot equivalent units, a year-on-year increase of 2.9 percent.
Chongqing, a municipality of 32 million people, boasts key geographic advantages as a strategic transport hub in the national development program for China’s western regions, as well as being an intersection point of trade and projects involved in the Belt and Road Initiative and the Yangtze River Economic Belt.
During his inspection trip to Chongqing in 2016, President Xi Jinping said the municipality would become an inland international logistics hub. “This is full of promise,” he said while inspecting Guoyuan Port. –The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item