Former Port Shelter Firing Range In 1950, (some source said 1936 Most of the range ceased to be used in the 1970s. The government also relocated the residents of
Kau Sai Chau, an island in the firing range to the land area of Hebe Haven (known as Pak Sha Wan in the publication) in the 1950. In 2011, a
mortar shell was discovered on Shelter Island, which was formerly part of the firing range.
Port Shelter Water Control Zone Despite there is no legal definition of the boundary of the water body, a related concept
Port Shelter Water Control Zone had a legally defined boundary. It was regulated by the
Water Pollution Control Ordinance (Chapter 358 of the Law of Hong Kong) as well as "Water Pollution Control (Port Shelter Water Control Zone) Order" (Chapter 358M) and other regulations. The water control zone covers not only the Port Shelter and Inner Port Shelter proper, but also Hebe Haven, Sham Tuk Mun (),
Tsam Chuk Wan (),
Rocky Harbour () and many other surrounding water body. In 2018,
Typhoon Mangkhut damaged the Sai Kung Sewage Treatment Works, which just bordering the water control zone. After emergency repairs, the government did not find the water quality of the water control zone had become worse.
Outer Port Shelter Marine Park (proposed) Another related and overlapping concept, the proposed
Outer Port Shelter Marine Park, was scrapped in 2014. The proposed size of the marine park was . They proposed to turn at least 30% area of Port Shelter to be a no-take zone. Their definition of Port Shelter was excluding Hebe Haven, Outer Port Shelter and part of Inner Port Shelter, with a size of . Port Shelter, Inner Port Shelter, along with Rocky Harbours were also included in a proposed fisheries protection area in the 2000s, while Outer Port Shelter was listed as a no-take zone.
As Specified Sheltered Waters In the Schedule 2 of the Merchant Shipping (Certification and Licensing) Regulation (Chapter 548D of H.K. Law), they defined Port Shelter, in Specified Sheltered Waters context. For the purpose of that regulation, they defined Port Shelter Area as: The specified sheltered water that defined from above coordinates and natural boundaries, actually covers the Inner Port Shelter and Hebe Haven but only part of Port Shelter, that defined by the publication of the
U.S. Hydrographic Office, which draw the southern boundaries from
Lung Ha Wan to a peaked rock south of
Jin Island. That regulation also defined "Port Shelter and Rocky Harbour Area" that cover all of the Port Shelter (and some part of Outer Port Shelter by some definitions) and Rocky Harbour: ==References==