Building Payra deep-sea harbor — a challenge of nature
Bangladesh urgently needs an additional harbor to satisfy the rapidly growing export and import industries. The capacities of the two main harbors, Chittagong and Khulna, cannot cope with the rising demand. In addition, both harbors cannot be accessed by the most common container vessels, as the depth and size of these ports cannot be adjusted to berth the huge container vessels. The resulting frequent delay is severe bottle neck for the economic growth of Bangladesh and considerably adds to the overall costs of the imported and exported goods.
Since many years the site for a new port has been discussed and various places have been considered. The new port should serve the large container vessels, which are the main carriers for world-wide shipment. These vessels are up to 300 metres long and have a draught of about 15 metres. After discarding the potential sites at Sonadia and Matarbari as being too remote from the main industrial centers, the Bangladesh Government has chosen a new site close to the Meghna Estuary, along the tidal Rabnabad channel in the Patuakhali district.
This new site, the Payra port, is strategically well positioned. There seems to be enough place for expanding the complex harbor facilities, the site is close to the main economic centers and may even serve as a port for the Indian hinterland.
However, there is a major problem for the Payra site: it has no natural access from the deep sea. In front of the proposed new harbor, the mud flats of the Meghna submarine delta extend seaward over a distance of more than 100 km. According to the navigational map the water depth of 5 metres is reached at 24 km from the shore, the 10 metres line lies another 22 km offshore and the distance to the 15 metres water depth adds another 14 km.
The sea floor in this region consists of a highly mobile mixture of fine sand, silt and clay. This unconsolidated sediment has a thickness of several tens of meters and is mainly supplied by the sediment input from the Meghna River. Tidal currents almost continuously transport sediments in various shore-parallel directions.
A 60 km-long navigational channel with a general depth of at least 15 metres and a width of 300 metres has to be dredged cutting through this shallow mobile mud belt in order to access the Payra port. A huge volume of sediment of more than 100 million cubic metres of sediment has to be removed, which would require the action of the world-wide largest dredge vessel for several years.
At the same time, tidal currents will constantly move sediment from both sides into the artificial channel restoring the equilibrium surface and counteract the costly dredging operations. Every year at least 100 million cubic metres of sediment are transported from the Meghna estuary through the coastal waters westwards to the Swatch of No Ground.
A significant part of this sediment load will be trapped in the deeper parts of the navigational channel. Compared to this siltation by tidal currents, the impacts of cyclones are much more severe. The huge storm waves with a height of up to 7 m can mobilize the soft muds on the both sites of the channel, which then flow into the navigational channel.
In addition, the faststorm-induced currents transport huge amounts of sediment from the mouth of the Meghna towards the west, which will be also trapped in the channel.Thus, a single cyclone can partly or even completely fill the channel and the access of the ocean-going container vessels to the harbor will be clogged for a long time.
In summary, the construction of the harbor facilities should be not a problem, when the general fast subsidence of the area and the exposition to cyclonic inundations are considered. However, the dredging and maintenance the navigational channel through an area with the world-wide highest input of sediment would be extremely costly, difficult or even impossible. On a mid-term operational basis, the enormous flow of sediment into the 60 km long artificial channel cannot be mastered.
Even the richest ports could not provide enough funds and technical resources to overcome this overwhelming sediment flow offshore the proposed deep-sea port. Bangladesh engineers and scientists have a long experience with the power of the rivers and they should adapt this know-how to the sea, which can be even more destructive than the mighty rivers. The Bangladesh Government should give a second thought to the position of the new harbor and choose a site for the deep-sea port that can be built and maintained in accordance with nature.
Hermann Kudrasis, a former marine geologist of the Geological Survey of Germany, now with MARUM/University of Bremen.
Bangladesh urgently needs an additional harbor to satisfy the rapidly growing export and import industries. The capacities of the two main harbors, Chittagong and Khulna, cannot cope with the rising demand. In addition, both harbors cannot be accessed by the most common container vessels, as the depth and size of these ports cannot be adjusted to berth the huge container vessels. The resulting frequent delay is severe bottle neck for the economic growth of Bangladesh and considerably adds to the overall costs of the imported and exported goods.
Since many years the site for a new port has been discussed and various places have been considered. The new port should serve the large container vessels, which are the main carriers for world-wide shipment. These vessels are up to 300 metres long and have a draught of about 15 metres. After discarding the potential sites at Sonadia and Matarbari as being too remote from the main industrial centers, the Bangladesh Government has chosen a new site close to the Meghna Estuary, along the tidal Rabnabad channel in the Patuakhali district.
This new site, the Payra port, is strategically well positioned. There seems to be enough place for expanding the complex harbor facilities, the site is close to the main economic centers and may even serve as a port for the Indian hinterland.
However, there is a major problem for the Payra site: it has no natural access from the deep sea. In front of the proposed new harbor, the mud flats of the Meghna submarine delta extend seaward over a distance of more than 100 km. According to the navigational map the water depth of 5 metres is reached at 24 km from the shore, the 10 metres line lies another 22 km offshore and the distance to the 15 metres water depth adds another 14 km.
The sea floor in this region consists of a highly mobile mixture of fine sand, silt and clay. This unconsolidated sediment has a thickness of several tens of meters and is mainly supplied by the sediment input from the Meghna River. Tidal currents almost continuously transport sediments in various shore-parallel directions.
A 60 km-long navigational channel with a general depth of at least 15 metres and a width of 300 metres has to be dredged cutting through this shallow mobile mud belt in order to access the Payra port. A huge volume of sediment of more than 100 million cubic metres of sediment has to be removed, which would require the action of the world-wide largest dredge vessel for several years.
At the same time, tidal currents will constantly move sediment from both sides into the artificial channel restoring the equilibrium surface and counteract the costly dredging operations. Every year at least 100 million cubic metres of sediment are transported from the Meghna estuary through the coastal waters westwards to the Swatch of No Ground.
A significant part of this sediment load will be trapped in the deeper parts of the navigational channel. Compared to this siltation by tidal currents, the impacts of cyclones are much more severe. The huge storm waves with a height of up to 7 m can mobilize the soft muds on the both sites of the channel, which then flow into the navigational channel.
In addition, the faststorm-induced currents transport huge amounts of sediment from the mouth of the Meghna towards the west, which will be also trapped in the channel.Thus, a single cyclone can partly or even completely fill the channel and the access of the ocean-going container vessels to the harbor will be clogged for a long time.
In summary, the construction of the harbor facilities should be not a problem, when the general fast subsidence of the area and the exposition to cyclonic inundations are considered. However, the dredging and maintenance the navigational channel through an area with the world-wide highest input of sediment would be extremely costly, difficult or even impossible. On a mid-term operational basis, the enormous flow of sediment into the 60 km long artificial channel cannot be mastered.
Even the richest ports could not provide enough funds and technical resources to overcome this overwhelming sediment flow offshore the proposed deep-sea port. Bangladesh engineers and scientists have a long experience with the power of the rivers and they should adapt this know-how to the sea, which can be even more destructive than the mighty rivers. The Bangladesh Government should give a second thought to the position of the new harbor and choose a site for the deep-sea port that can be built and maintained in accordance with nature.
Hermann Kudrasis, a former marine geologist of the Geological Survey of Germany, now with MARUM/University of Bremen.