Port Walcott is a large open water harbour located on the northwest coast of Western Australia, located near the town of Point Samson. With the neighboring ports of Port Hedland and Dampier, Port Walcott is one of three major iron ore exporting ports in the Pilbara region, and in the top five ports in Australia by tonnage.
Geography
Port Walcott's main population centre is Point Samson, which has a population of 298. Port Walcott receives an annual rainfall of about 295 mm. The most rain received by Port Walcott in a day was 336 mm. Port Walcott lies between Dampier and Port Hedland at the mouth of the Harding River. Landmarks within it include Cape Lambert, Wickham, Jarman Island, Butchers Inlet and the historical town of Cossack, the first port in the northwest of Western Australia. The town of Roebourne is situated further inland on the banks of the Harding River.
History
Early European exploration of northwest Western Australia commenced around the Nickol Bay and Port Walcott areas, as colonial settlers established pastoral and pearling industries in the late-19th century. Early shipping links to the outside world centred on the port of Cossack, now a ghost town. In 1818, the explorer and surveyor Captain Phillip Parker King, in the Mermaid, charted Nickol Bay. Visits to the region by American whalers are recorded to have occurred from around the 1840–50s. In April 1861, a government-funded expedition sailed to Nickol Bay in the Dolphin, while in 1862, Bateman sent his vessel to harvest pearl shell in the area. In April 1863 Captain Peter Hedland on the Mystery discovered Mangrove Harbour and Captain John Jarman on the Tien Tsin discovered Tien Tsin Harbour. Later the same year the Mystery and the Tien Tsin brought settlers and stock, and established the first European settlement in the northwest, on the banks of the Harding River, inland from Tien Tsin Harbour.
Port and Cargoes
The iron ore cargo loading facility is operated byRobe RiverMining Company . The terminals at Port Walcott, East Intercourse Island and Parker Point are together operated by the Pilbara Ports Authority. The port itself is an open water port and the Cape Lambert wharf is exposed to strong cross currents due up to over 5 metres of tidal movement. Six RA Star 3200 tugs are used by the facility to assist vessels in berthing and unberthing operations. The terminal consists of
8 berths
4 ship loaders
5 car dumpers
4 million tonnes of live stockpile capacity
This has been expanded in the recent years to a capacity of 80 mtpa In 2010, as part of its expansion plans, the $276 billion Port B project contract was awarded to John Holland. The project was completed in 2012, and involved the construction of a new 920 metre jetty and a two berth wharf, new shiploading facilities and associated piping works. While associated with the facility at Cape Lambert, the port is referred to in shipping circles and official shipping documents as Port Walcott. While the names of Cape Lambert and Port Walcott are often used interchangeably, the official name of the port is "Port Walcott" and the iron ore loading facility within is referred to as "Cape Lambert wharf".
Other information
Local magnetic anomalies are reported northward of Cape Lambert, in the approaches to Port Walcott
The Norwegian-owned iron barque Solveig carrying jarrah piles for the Point Samson jetty was anchored in Port Walcott when it was wrecked during a cyclone in 1907 The Department of Maritime Archaeology lists 14 such shipwrecks in the vicinity, lost between 1868 and 1970.
The bulk carrier "Hanjin Port Walcott" was named after Port Walcott.