These new ports—Mulapeta in Srikakulam, Ramayapatnam
in Nellore, Machilipatnam in Krishna, and Kakinada SEZ—are set to transform the
State’s maritime infrastructure, backed by a Rs 400 crore allocation in the FY
2025-26 budget. With the long coastline
of 1,053 km, Andhra Pradesh is poised to unlock a $20 billion blue economy by
2035. The investments allocated for these ports include Rs 100 crore for land
acquisition at Mulapeta (Bhavanapadu) in Srikakulam, Rs 50 crore for Kakinada
SEZ, Rs 150 crore for Machilipatnam, and Rs 100 crore funding for the first
phase of Ramayapatnam.
The combined cost of the projects reaches Rs 17,689.26
crore, targeting a capacity of 145 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) by 2030 and
over 75,000 jobs. Mulapeta, Ramayapatnam , Kakinada SEZ, and Machilipatnam will
complement Andhra Pradesh’s existing maritime strength, which includes Visakhapatnam
Port—the State’s major port that handled 41.79 million tonnes of cargo in the
first half of 2024 alone. However, the
construction of these greenfield ports is progressing at varying speeds.
Mulapeta, under Vishwa Samudra Ports, is 27.69% complete and is set for
completion by April 2026. Ramayapatnam, managed by Navayuga Engineering, leads
at 52.91% completion, with a December 2025 deadline. Kakinada SEZ, a
public-private partnership, is at 20.80%, while Machilipatnam faces delays and
is at 27.30% progress.
A senior government
official explained that Machilipatnam’s delay is due to challenges with the
soil structure and the absence of land reclamation in the project. Despite
this, the State remains confident that all projects will be completed on time,
except for Machilipatnam, which may be delayed by up to six months.
The State is expanding its port infrastructure with 16
non-major ports. For example, Krishnapatnam Port handled 37.786 million tonnes
of cargo by November 2024, generating Rs 57.49 crore, while Gangavaram Port
processed 16.201 million tonnes, contributing Rs 14.751 crore. AP is developing
four fishing harbours and six fish landing centres to promote coastal
livelihoods. At the Maritime, Logistics & Infrastructure Development conference
on March 16, 2025, Minister BC Janardhan Reddy emphasised AP’s ambition to
become a global investment hub. He
outlined the Maritime Policy 2024-29, aiming for 20% of India’s cargo by 2047,
a 300 MTPA target through phase II port expansions, and a reduction in
logistics costs from 14% to 6-8% of GDP by 2030.
He emphasised leveraging technology, improving
multimodal connectivity, and building sustainable infrastructure to position AP
as a major global trade hub.