Picton Terminals is an inland port in Lake Ontario, on the north shore of Hallowell Mills Cove, in the town of Picton, Ontario, Canada.

Picton Terminals
Tarped piles of road salt stored at Picton Terminals, 2017
Map
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Location
CountryCanada
LocationPicton, Ontario
Coordinates44°02′02″N 77°08′13″W / 44.034°N 77.137°W / 44.034; -77.137
Details
Opened2014
Operated byABNA Investments Ltd.
Size28 ha (69 acres)
No. of berths1
Draft depth9.44 metres (31.0 ft)[1]
CEOBen Doornkamp
Warehouse space0 square metres (0 sq ft)
Statistics
Vessel arrivalsunknown
Annual cargo tonnageunknown
Annual revenueunknown
Net incomeunknown
Main importsroad salt, aggregate, farming products, new and recycled scrap steel.[1]
Website
www.pictonterminals.ca

History

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The port was built in the 1950s by Bethlehem Steel to facilitate the transhipment of iron ore mined in Marmora and conveyed to Picton via rail and, after the Marmoraton mine shut down in 1978, activity at the port diminished drastically with annual loads of sodium chloride delivered by ship occurring most falls from the 1980s until 2019.

Services

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Cargo

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The tonnage of cargo passing through the port is made up mostly of aggregate materials, chiefly road salt, but also farming products, new and recycled scrap steel.[1]

In 2020, Picton Terminals applied for permits to engage in transshipment, including sea container shipping.[2]

Passenger

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In 2020, Picton Terminals applied to the Municipality to add cruise ship docking to their services, in order to allow Great Lakes cruise ships to dock.[2]

Controversies

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In 2018, Picton Terminals pled guilty and was subsequently fined $27,500 for contravening the Environmental Protection Act in Picton's provincial offences court. The plea resulted from a 2016 discharge of petroleum coke (petcoke) which Terminals was stockpiling on White Chapel Road. Petcoke dust, considered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to be dangerous to heart and lung health, was found to have drifted onto several nearby residences, including a neighbouring pool. Picton Terminals undertook remediation work, site restoration and duct cleaning at a cost of $6,400.[3]

Notes

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "About Us". pictonterminals.ca. Retrieved December 7, 2024.
  2. ^ a b Williams, Sarah (October 26, 2020). "Division dispelled after council votes unanimously against Picton Terminals proposal". Picton Gazette. Retrieved December 7, 2024.
  3. ^ Parks, Jason (July 11, 2018). "Picton Terminals pleads guilty to EPA charge". Picton Gazette. Retrieved December 7, 2024.