Virginia Port Authority

02/03/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 02/03/2026 13:52

Port Advances Capacity to Handle Big Ships with Addition of Ultra Large Container Vessel Berth

NORFOLK, VA -The Port of Virginia® is continuing to modernize and expand its operation and recently debuted additional capacity to safely handle simultaneous calls of ultra-large container vessels (ULCVs).

In late January, the port put four new, all-electric, Suez-class ship-to-shore container cranes into service at Norfolk International Terminals (NIT). With the expanded crane fleet at NIT, the port now has the capacity to accommodate four ULCVs at once. Today, the port has 29 ship-to-shore cranes situated on deep water that are capable of handling the biggest container vessels currently serving the Atlantic Ocean trade.

"This is the kind infrastructure investment that lets ocean carriers and cargo owners using The Port of Virginia know they can grow their volumes here," said Sarah J. McCoy, interim CEO and executive director of the Virginia Port Authority. "Our berth capability is growing. We now have four ULCV berths and we are quickly heading toward having the berth capacity to handle five ultra-large container vessels at once."

An ocean carrier's requirements to safely and efficiently handle its big ships will not outstrip the port's capabilities to meet those needs, McCoy said. "We understand the future for ship sizes and cargo volumes and we are ensuring readiness at our berths, in our cargo yards, truck gates, rail ramps and in our channels."

The increase in ULCV berth capacity, McCoy said, coincides with the effort of dredging Virginia's commercial shipping channels and Norfolk Harbor to 55 feet deep, which will make Virginia home to the deepest port on the US East Coast. The dredge work on the 55-foot channel is set completion by month's end and the fifth ULCV berth comes online in 2027.

"Our channels are wide enough to handle two-way ULCV traffic and we are in the last phase of deepening," McCoy said. "When the 55-foot channel opens later this month, multiple ULCVs, loaded to their absolute limits, will be able to call here without water depth restrictions, overhead obstructions, berth capacity or concern for congested ship channels. The Port of Virginia is America's Most Modern Gateway and it's ready for the future."

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The Virginia Port Authority (VPA) is a political subdivision of the Commonwealth of Virginia. The VPA owns and through its private operating subsidiary, Virginia International Terminals, LLC (VIT), operates four general cargo facilities Norfolk International Terminals, Portsmouth Marine Terminal, Newport News Marine Terminal and the Virginia Inland Port in Warren County. The VPA leases Virginia International Gateway and Richmond Marine Terminal. An economic impact study from The College of William and Mary shows that The Port of Virginia is a driver of more than 565,000 jobs and $63 billion in Virginia gross domestic product on an annual basis.

Virginia Port Authority published this content on February 03, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on February 03, 2026 at 19:52 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]