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Ports Association in UK Welcome Freeports Milestone

16th November 2020
The British Ports Association (BPA) represents the interests of 86% of UK port trade to the various tiers of Government and beyond. Above the Irish Sea port of Liverpool in north-west England is part of the Peel Ports Group (incl. Greenock (Clydeport), Scotland) is a member of the BPA. The group operates through a subsidiary, BG Freight Line with lo-lo services among them involving Greenock, Liverpool and Dublin (incl. running of the MTL container terminal) The British Ports Association (BPA) represents the interests of 86% of UK port trade to the various tiers of Government and beyond. Above the Irish Sea port of Liverpool in north-west England is part of the Peel Ports Group (incl. Greenock (Clydeport), Scotland) is a member of the BPA. The group operates through a subsidiary, BG Freight Line with lo-lo services among them involving Greenock, Liverpool and Dublin (incl. running of the MTL container terminal) Credit: Peel Ports - twitter

Ports in the UK represented by the British Ports Association (BPA) today welcomed the launch of the bidding process and the publication of the bidding prospectus for Freeports in England.

According to the BPA they have been promoting a port zoning economic vision that supports regional growth and prosperity akin to the Freeports strategy for several years.

This stage represents a key step forward to the establishment of a more advanced model Freeports than previously seen. However inclusivity and consistency around the UK is still something policy makers need to consider to ensure all regions can benefit.

The British Ports Association, the national association for all types of ports, harbours and terminals, speaks for over 400 ports, terminals and port facilities. BPA membership facilitates 86% of all UK port trade and handles 85% of all vessel arrivals in the UK.

The BPA has championed the value of port clusters as a way of driving economic growth in coastal regions. Since the UK Government’s announcement of the establishment of 10 Freeports in the Summer of 2019, the BPA has argued that the Government must prioritise the principles of inclusivity, competition and fairness when forging the policy.

The BPA welcomed recent suggestions that the Treasury would consider the establishment of more than 10 Freeports in the event they receive a large number of high-quality proposals.

More here on the development from the BPA and their Chief Executive Richard Ballantyne.

Published in Ports & Shipping
Jehan Ashmore

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Jehan Ashmore

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Jehan Ashmore is a marine correspondent, researcher and photographer, specialising in Irish ports, shipping and the ferry sector serving the UK and directly to mainland Europe. Jehan also occasionally writes a column, 'Maritime' Dalkey for the (Dalkey Community Council Newsletter) in addition to contributing to UK marine periodicals. 

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