The port is a key transport link between Java and Sumatra and is a major service provider for the heavy passenger and commercial ferry traffic from Merak to
Bakauheni across the
Sunda Strait on the southern tip of
Sumatra. Ferry services are operated by
ASDP Indonesia Ferry. Growth in demand for ferry services has been rapid in recent years. The facilities at the port are now very badly overstretched. The ageing ferry fleet and poor supporting infrastructure are major restrictions on the port's efficiency. Long delays for passengers, buses and trucks waiting to board the ferries are common, especially at peak times of the year such as holiday periods when daily demand rises to over 2,000 cars and up to 500 buses per day. It is not unusual for trucks to bank up for or more from the port on the
Jakarta-Merak Toll Road and be held up in queues for two or three days. It is partly because of problems of this kind that consideration is being given to the very ambitious
Sunda Strait Bridge project. Merak port also provides services for Indonesia's largest concentration of
petrochemical facilities located nearby along the Merak peninsula. More than 40 petrochemical plants operate near the seaport, an increase from two in 1990. In 2007
Shell Oil announced plans to expand its Merak port operations with the construction of a $US52 million oil storage tank. ==See also==