Around 8 million tons of cargo is being moved through
inland water transport in Andhra Pradesh every year, said AP Inland Waterways
Authority (APIWA) chairman Dilip Kumar Dantuluri.
He was addressing
the stakeholders during a meeting jointly organised by APIWA and AP Chambers at
Vijayawada.
The cluster of cement industries located at
Muktyala/Jaggayyapeta are connected to the network of inland waterways along
Krishna River and Bandar Canal through Kakinada port and Machilipatnam port.
The power plant in Kadapa region, which has Inland Water Transport
potential of nearly 14 milllion tons per annum including Coal, Cement, Gypsum
and Bauxite, is connected to Penna river through Krishnapatnam port,
integrating it with the coastal route
Other important projects include
roll-on/roll-off services at
Muktyala and Ibrahimpatnam on Krishna River, at Seethanagaram on Godavari
River, water-bound tourism circuits on rivers and isolated water bodies.
Asserting that the State government in its endeavor to
boost inland water transport has set up an exclusive vertical Authority
(APIWA) headed by a Chief Executive Officer for the development of waterways
and for implementation of the Inland Vessel Act 2021 to ensure safe vessel
movement, he said that various projects to facilitate movement of domestic and
EXIM cargo of cement and power plants in the State through inland waterways are
under formulation.
Andhra Pradesh has about 57 small, medium
and large rivers with huge river delta spread over the length and breadth of
the State and a vast coastline of 975 km which could be tapped for immense port-led development
by integrating Inland Water Transport (IWT) with coastal shipping. Of these,
eleven rivers/canals for a length of about 1,555 km is assessed to have
potential for development as waterways for economic freight transport. About
978 km of this to be part of declared National Waterways, he added.