Dubai International Airport Cargo Gateway

Dubai International Airport Cargo Gateway

Once named Dubai Cargo Village and owned by the Dubai Department of Civil Aviation, this facility has undergone a major restructuring since 2008. It has been re-branded as Dubai International Airport Cargo Gateway with the adjacent facilities under construction in Jebel Ali being named Al Maktoum Airport Cargo Gateway. Both cargo gateways are now controlled by Dubai Airports Company.

DCG is considered one of the most technologically advanced cargo handling facilities. In January 2008[1], DCG completed construction on a "Mega Cargo Terminal" capable of handling an additional 1.2 million tonnes per year. In 2008, DCG handled 1.8 million tons of cargo, and 25,279 cargo aircraft [2], and ACI ranks DCG as the world's 11th busiest air cargo terminal.

DCG is the Middle East’s first cargo handling facility to be awarded an ISO 9002 [3]certificate by Lloyd's Register of Quality Assurance in 1998.

Over 30 airlines have offices in DCV, while the main airport is host to 124 airlines and provides flights to over 207 destinations[4], in addition DCG provides direct flights to 20 European cities, 60 cities in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa and has parking for 17 aircraft.

Contents

Location

Dubai International Airport Cargo Gateway is strategically located adjacent to Dubai International Airport, in the United Arab Emirates. DCG is roughly 40km from the adjacent Jebel Ali, where Dubai Airports Company is building Al Maktoum International Airport and [[Al Maktoum Airport Cargo Gateway].[5]

History

When Dubai Cargo gateway was built in 1991, it was designed to handle 150,000 tonnes of cargo per year. The 300,000-square-metre complex was built at a cost of $75 million (about Dh 275.5 million) to accommodate air and sea freight growth and facilitate transshipment operations between the Indian sub-continent, South East Asia, the Far East and Europe. Within a few years, the facility became too small to accommodate rising demand.

As Dubai rapidly transformed itself into one of the world’s key re-export hubs, DCGs terminals and sea-air cargo centre recorded consistent double-digit growth and the facilities expanded to meet demands. Dubai Airport is currently the world's fastest expanding airport.

Expansion

Within only a few years of Dubai Cargo gateway’s founding, cargo activity at the Village outgrew available capacity, and the need arose to accommodate rapidly increasing demand. This demand resulted from several factors combined: Dubai’s phenomenal growth, the determined expansion of Emirates Airlines, increased popularity of air cargo transportation, and the UAE’s central position on the world map.

To meet the need for cargo space, the Department of Civil Aviation embarked on a multi-phase US$200 million expansion program set to increase DCG’s freight handling capacity with a new Mega Cargo Terminal. The Mega Cargo Terminal, completed in 2008, features a designated function and state-of-the-art equipment for each level. The final phase will increase DCG’s cargo handling capacity to 2.7 million tonnes per year (a sharp increase from DCG’s initial annual handling capacity of 150,000 tonnes of cargo in 1991).

The Mega Cargo Terminal features an express mail centre, new facilities for administrative and agents’ offices, a multi-storey car park, elevated roadway, a new central utility plant, a mosque, and other amenities. The Mega Cargo Terminal attempts to consolidate Dubai Cargo gateway’s position as a pivotal facility for cargo movement in the region and secure Dubai’s position as one of the world’s leading cargo destinations.[6]

Equipment & Handling Facilities

Total Handling Capacity About 1,800,000 tonnes/year [7]
Main building 350,000 tonnes/year
Mega Cargo Terminal 1,200,000 tonnes/year
Temporary Facility 100,000 tonnes/year dedicated to EK Skycargo operations
EK Skycargo warehouse 350,000 tonnes/year
Cargo building (Main) Ground area 24,985 sq.m.
Handling area 8,300 sq.m.
Storage capacity (Main) 7420 tonnes/day

Operations

Dubai Cargo Village's main warehouses are located within a bonded area, and have the capacity for 308 ULDs, as well as racks for small, medium, and large warehouse pallets. There are 56 truck docks for import, export and perishable cargo, and 7 additional docks solely for sea-air traffic.

Dnata is the handling operator of Dubai's air cargo terminals.

Dubai Cargo Village is located in an Free Trade Zone[8] to reduce customs and administrative delays.

References

  1. ^ Staff Writer (2008, January 7) Arabianbusiness.com Dubai Cargo Village announces major restructure
  2. ^ Staff Writer (2008, February 8) Arabianbusiness.com Dubai hub continues steady growth during 2007
  3. ^ Stensgaard, Anne-Birte (2005, February 14). AMEinfo.com Department of Civil Aviation Dubai receives ISO 9001-2000 certification
  4. ^ Sadubin, Derek (2008, April 25) The Australian Middle East soars as Dubai outdoes Changi
  5. ^ Airport Council International (2009, October) ACI World Report
  6. ^ Department of Civil Aviation (2008, January 2) Dubai International Airport Cargo Gateway
  7. ^ Air Transport Intelligence (2010). Dubai International Airport Profile Traffic Statistics
  8. ^ Staff Writer (2010, January 16) Arabianbusiness.com Gateway to the Gulf

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Dubai Airports Company — was structured in 2008 to take control of Dubai World Central International Airport in Jebel Ali, Dubai International Airport, and Dubai Cargo Village[1] Incorporated by Dubai Aviation City Corporation,[2]Dubai Airports Company is divided into a… …   Wikipedia

  • Hong Kong International Airport — HKIA redirects here. HKIA may also refer to Hong Kong Institute of Architects. Hong Kong Airport redirects here. For the old airport at Kai Tak, see Kai Tak Airport. Hong Kong International Airport Chek Lap Kok Airport 香港國際機場 赤鱲角機場 …   Wikipedia

  • Al Maktoum International Airport — IATA: DWC – ICAO: OMDW …   Wikipedia

  • Athens International Airport — Infobox Airport name = Athens International Airport Elefthérios Venizélos nativename = Διεθνής Αερολιμένας Αθηνών Ελευθέριος Βενιζέλος nativename a = nativename r = image width = 100 caption = Logo of Athens Airport image2 width = 250px caption2 …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto Pearson International Airport — This article is about the Canadian airport. For the airfield in the United States, see Pearson Field. For other airports in Toronto, see List of airports in the Greater Toronto Area. YYZ redirects here. For the instrumental by Rush, see YYZ… …   Wikipedia

  • Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport — Bombay Airport, Mumbai Airport and Sahar Airport redirect here. For Mumbai s general aviation airport, see Juhu Aerodrome. Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport छ्त्रपती शिवाजी आंतरराष्ट्रीय विमानतळ …   Wikipedia

  • John F. Kennedy International Airport — For the regional airport in Wisconsin, see John F. Kennedy Memorial Airport. John F. Kennedy International Airport USGS aerial image as of April 8, 1994 IATA: JFK – ICAO: KJFK – …   Wikipedia

  • Los Angeles International Airport — LAX redirects here. For other uses, see LAX (disambiguation). See also: List of airports in the Los Angeles area Los Angeles International Airport …   Wikipedia

  • Malpensa International Airport — Infobox Airport name = Malpensa International Airport nativename = Aeroporto di Milano Malpensa IATA = MXP ICAO = LIMC type = Public owner = operator = SEA Aeroporti di Milano city served = location = Milan, Italy elevation f = 767 elevation m =… …   Wikipedia

  • Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport — Infobox Airport name = Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport IATA = ATL ICAO = KATL FAA = ATL type = Public owner = City of Atlanta operator = Department of Aviation city served = Atlanta, Georgia location = College Park, East Point,… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”