Port of Savannah Adds Four Ship-to-Shore Cranes

Equipment Will Help Move Cargo Through Port
Port of Savannah
Four Super Post-Panamax ship-to-shore cranes are delivered to the Port of Savannah’s Garden City Terminal. (Georgia Ports Authority)

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SAVANNAH — The Port of Savannah is America’s third-busiest shipping facility because of efficiency.

Cargo moves from ship to shore to truck or train to regional distribution center within 24 hours. On Aug. 24, the Georgia Ports Authority received four pieces of equipment vital to speeding containers through Savannah.

A heavy lift cargo ship delivered four Super Post-Panamax ship-to-shore cranes to the Port of Savannah’s Garden City Terminal. The BigLift Barentsz, which measures 519 feet, carried the cranes up the Savannah River. The unusual-looking vessel passed River Street and under the Talmadge Bridge around 5:45 p.m.



The cranes are the “workhorses of container port operations,” according to a GPA official. The four cranes will replace older equipment in Savannah’s 34-crane fleet, which allows dockworkers at the Garden City and Ocean terminals to service up to 10 ships at a time.

GPA purchased the cranes in January 2021 from Konecranes, a Finnish company with manufacturing facilities in China. The crane upgrades are part of a $1.9 billion infrastructure improvement plan.

“No other terminal in the nation can bring more cranes to bear, or match the efficiency, productivity and global connectivity of the Port of Savannah,” said Griff Lynch, Georgia Ports Authority president and CEO.

The Port of Savannah handles 11.2% of all container traffic in the U.S. Only the ports of Los Angeles/Long Beach and New York/New Jersey move more cargo.

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