The subsidiaries and partial ownership partners of TPG are involved in all facets of port operation, including
stevedoring,
shipping agency, cargo handling,
storage and transportation, infrastructure management, communications and information services, financial services, power supply, real estate development, health care, personnel training, education, port security, transportation, fire protection, port facilities management, environmental management, etc. The core activity of the Port is, naturally, cargo handling and processing. As a comprehensive port, it handles all sorts of cargo including dry and liquid bulk, general cargo, containers, vehicles, and passengers. Tianjin Port operates 365 days a year, 24 hours a day (on three shifts from 00:00–08:00, 08:00–16:00, and 16:00–24:00).
Port production As of 2011, the Port had 217 berths (including service berths); 90 berths were capable of accommodating ships over 10,000 DWT. Of these, 72 could dock ships over 50,000 DWT; 30 over 100,000 DWT, 23 over 150,000 DWT, 5 over 200,000 DWT, and 2 over 300,000 DWT. The Port's docking terminals are operated by autonomous companies that are mostly either fully owned by, or are joint ventures with, TPC or TPD. While the 2004 Port Law allowed full foreign ownership of port facilities, TPG is still the majority shareholder of all but a few of the Port's main terminals, excepting single-company (customs type II) terminals. Additional stevedoring personnel is provided by a number of labor services companies affiliated to various operators. Secondary wharves tend to the service, supply, and maintenance ships that a complex port needs to function. These facilities range from temporary sand unloading wharves needed for construction to large bunkering wharves, workboat stations, and the bases of the various law enforcement agencies. The Tianjin Port Group's Operations Department (天津港集团业务部) is in charge of coordinating the productive operation of the Port and must be informed of all ship movements and major operations. The production schedule (ship movement plan) is arranged by the TPG Dispatch Control Center (天津港集团生产调度指中心), in coordination with the wharf operators, the MSA, and the pilot center. The Dispatch Center organizes ship movements, tracks pilotage operations, and supervises terminal operations via real-time CCTV monitoring. The Dagukou port area has a separate dispatching center (天津临港经济区船舶调度指挥中心). The TTLC operates the
harbor tugs,
fireboats,
pilot boats, and other ancillary craft such as the
crew boat Xinbinhai or the sightseeing boat
Xinhaimen (used for inspection and visiting VIPs). The company operates 26 harbor tugs (between 2,600
HP and 6,000 HP of power), five pilot ships, seven other ancillary crafts, two
floating cranes (120 tonnes and 200 tonnes capacity); and around three dozen
lighters, the largest around 1,340 tonnes displacement. The Dagusha channel is served by a subsidiary company of TTLC, the Tianjin Lingang Tug Company (天津临港拖轮有限公司), which operates four tugboats. CNOOC Bohai Oil maintains a flotilla of 110
offshore support vessels (OSV), many home-ported at Tianjin. These boats are available for emergency work under MSA authority. Two of CNOOC's floating cranes (800 tonnes and 500 tonnes) can be commercially engaged for harbor duty.
Port maintenance and construction TPG operates as the
port landlord and provides most utilities, municipal services, and ancillary services to the various port operators. The services it provides are very wide in scope, spanning everything from electrical power to construction materials to printing services. The main organ of TPG's landlord function is the Tianjin Port Facilities Management Company (天津港设施管理服务公司), which manages and maintains all municipal services—including roads, railroads, bridges, water, and sewerage—installs and maintains wharf equipment and other production material, provides municipal administration, and provides engineering consultancy services. As an artificial port dependent on dredged channels susceptible to silting, continuous depth surveying is critical to the Port. Tianjin Port is the base of the Beihai Navigational Security Center's Tianjin Marine Survey and Charting Center (北海航海保障中心天津海事测绘中心) with responsibility for the
hydrographic surveying, monitoring,
fairway sounding, and
charting of all waters and shipping channels in the Beihai (Northern Seas) area, which includes the
Bohai and
Yellow seas. As of 2011, the Hydrographic Brigade had 149 personnel, The Tianjin Dredging Company (天津航道局) is the organic waterway management company of the Tianjin Port Group. As of January 2010, the TDC deployed 100 boats and had the largest dredging capacity of China with a capacity of 300 million cubic meters and more than 500,000 kilowatts of vessel power. Dredging the Haihe Channel is the responsibility of the Tianjin Municipal Water Management Bureau (天津市水务局), which maintains both navigability and river flow capacity (set at 800 cubic meters). The Water Management dredgers operate from wharves at the Haihe Second Barrier and at the Haihe Tidal Barrier. Routine icebreaking is usually handled by the Tug & Lighter Company. In case of ice emergencies, the MSA coordinates icebreaking patrols using heavy harbor tugs and dredges. During the frozen winter of 2010–11, the Port authorities estimated that there were 16 ships with icebreaking capabilities available, 10 of which belonged to the TTLC. CNOOC Bohai had 24 icebreakers, needed to clear
offshore platforms, and also lent two larger icebreakers to the Port. The Port's main construction and engineering outfit is
CCCC First Harbor Engineering (中交第一航务工程局有限公司). Four subsidiary companies carry out all forms of project engineering and construction from roads to breakwaters. As of 2010, First Harbor Engineering First Company (the main boat outfit) had a fleet of 74 work vessels. As in the case of dredgers, the sheer scale of construction in the Port means that many other outfits deploy hundreds of vessels. As of 2008, there were 418 construction vessels operating at the Port, including 236 sand
barges and fluvial workboats. The Tianjin Research Institute for Water Transport Engineering is in charge of the technical supervision of most port engineering projects. Commercial and residential property development in newly reclaimed or repurposed land is one of the four core "industries" of the Port. The Tianjin Port Real Estate Development Company (天津港地产发展有限公司), founded 2009, is now very active in developing both residential and commercial property on Port land.
Services and amenities The main
bunker oil,
lubricants, and water provider in Tianjin Port is
Tianjin Chimbusco (中国船舶燃料供应天津公司). Chimbusco China had a monopoly on the supply of
bonded bunker oil (i.e. for foreign vessels) in China until 2006. Tianjin Chimbusco (now a TPG subsidiary) retained its exclusive rights in Tianjin until 2009, and the end of the monopoly resulted in a black gold rush of competing bunkerage companies:
Sinopec Zhoushan entered the Tianjin market in October 2010, followed in December 2010 by
SinoBunker, and in June 2011, China Changjiang Bunker joined. This sudden rise in competition resulted in a serious price war and crashing prices in 2011. Most
forms of maritime fuels are available, primarily IFO 180 centistoke and 380 centistoke; IFO 120 centistoke, MDG, MDO, and other diesels are available. Bunkering operations are done by
fuel tender, as most berths do not have fueling equipment. Equally, drinking water is mostly delivered by tender. Several dozen
ship chandlers are capable of supplying all necessary deck, engine, cabin stores, and other provisions both at berth or at anchorage. The oldest international chandler is Tianjin Ocean Shipping Supply company (天津市外轮供应公司), owned by the Tianjin government. Most spare parts are available locally, and special orders can be flown in easily.
Bilge,
slops and
ballast water disposal is a major pollution hazard for the Bohai Bay, and it is tightly regulated by the MSA. Only specially authorized enterprises can engage in their removal and disposal or in tank cleanup. Nevertheless, illegal dumping of ballast water is a persistent problem and one of the Port's major law enforcement challenges. Ships carrying oil or liquid chemicals, and all ships over 10,000 gt are required to sign an Agreement for Ship Pollution Response with one of four authorized emergency spill response companies. Tianjin Port Harbor Service Company (天津港港口服务公司) is the Group's organic "housekeeping" service, providing cabin, hold and bedding clean-up, and garbage disposal for ships at berth. Other companies are available for all sorts of cleaning, disinfection and deck maintenance, 15 companies are authorized for ship garbage collection. As the port of a major city, facilities available to crews on
shore leave are extensive, if somewhat difficult to reach. The International Seamen's Club (天津新港国际海员俱乐部) is located at Xingang Liumi Road, opposite the Bomesc shipyard. Around two dozen crew management companies provide replacement crews at all times.
Ship repair and shipbuilding facilities Tianjin Port has several
ship repair and
shipbuilding facilities capable of carrying out almost all forms of ship repair and refitting for all but the largest ships, and those capabilities are increasing rapidly. The Tanggu port area was one of the earliest modern
shipbuilding areas of China. The still-functioning
Taku Dockyard (now the Tianjin City Shipyard) was founded in 1880 and is the oldest modern dockyard in Northern China. Many small shipyards operated in the Haihe region, but most have closed in recent years or will soon close to make way for the large development projects of the
Binhai Urban Core. The main ship repair facility in the port is the
CSIC Tianjin Xingang Shipyard. Founded in 1939, it is located at the very end of the main harbor basin, right next to the Haihe shiplock. Immediately next to it is the
CCCC Bomesc Maritime Industry's facility built in 2007. On the Nanjiang region, Singapore's
Sembawang Shipyard entered in 1997 to the first foreign joint shipyard project in China in partnership with Bohai Oil. That shipyard is now the CNOOC Bohai Oil BOHIC subsidiary. A large number of ship repair companies offer
maintenance services at berth, and the Tianjin Wuzhou Marine Service Engineering Co. (天津五洲海事工程有限公司) offers anchorage and under-way repairs using its specialized ship
Jinyuanhangxiu 1 (津远航修1号), one of only five such vessels in China.
Trade and shipping services One of the strategic goals of the port is to increase its high value-added services business, providing advance support for all forms of logistic activities. The Tianjin International Trade and Shipping Service District (天津 与航运服务区) The Service District is composed of nine high-rise buildings, including the TPG main office building and the International Shipping Service Center. The Tianjin International Trade and Shipping Service Center (天津国际贸易与航运服务中心) provides "one-stop" service for all sorts of aspects of shipping and trade, with a core mission of centralizing and streamlining the clearance process. The Center aggregates 270 government service windows from 14 government agencies, including customs, inspection and quarantine, maritime safety, border control, traffic control, maritime court, electronic customs clearance, business taxes, and state audit and supervision. The Dongjiang shipping services area is still under development, and aims to form a cluster of specific shipping services. Taking advantage of its favorable tax and
currency exchange regime, the Dongjiang Bonded Port intends to attract a cluster of enterprises related to the financing of
ship leasing and
shipbroking and to other forms of shipping financing including offshore financial services,
offshore banking,
marine insurers and
P&I clubs, ship registration, local offices of the leading
classification societies, and others. Engaging a shipping agent is mandatory for all foreign flagged ships, and Tianjin has several dozen such outfits operating at present. The largest agents are
Tianjin Penavico (天津外轮代理公司), owned by TPG, and
Tianjin Sinoagent (天津船务代理有限公司), a subsidiary of
Tianjin Sinotrans. Agencies have fairly extensive obligations as intermediaries for most paperwork procedures involving TPG, ship operators, or government agencies, as well as their traditional duties of arranging ship supply and cargo handling. == Passenger services ==