Transport in Italy - Ports and Harbours

Ports and Harbours

List of ports in Italy
  • Ancona
  • Arbatax
  • Augusta
  • Bari
  • Brindisi
  • Cagliari
  • Catania
  • Civitavecchia
  • Genoa
  • Gioia Tauro
  • La Spezia
  • Livorno
  • Messina
  • Milazzo
  • Naples
  • Olbia
  • Palermo
  • Porto Torres
  • Ravenna
  • Salerno
  • Savona
  • Taranto
  • Trieste
  • Venice
Busiest ports by cargo tonnage in Italy (2008) Busiest ports by passengers in Italy (2008)
Port Region Thousand tons %
Taranto Apulia 49,522 9.4
Genoa Liguria 46,469 8.8
Trieste Friuli-Venezia Giulia 37,195 7.1
Gioia Tauro Calabria 31,527 6.0
Ravenna Emilia-Romagna 30,075 5.7
Venice Veneto 29,920 5.7
Livorno Tuscany 28,667 5.4
Augusta Sicily 26,849 5.1
Porto Foxi Sardinia 26,407 5.0
Santa Panagia Sicily 17,305 3.3
La Spezia Liguria 17,014 3.2
Savona-Vado Liguria 16,370 3.1
Milazzo Sicily 15,405 2.9
Olbia Sardinia 12,875 2.4
Brindisi Apulia 10,767 2.0
Other 129,851 24.7
Italy 526,218 100.0
Port Region Thousand pass. %
Messina Sicily 10,380 11.5
Reggio di Calabria Calabria 10,116 11.2
Capri Campania 7,169 8.0
Naples Campania 6,185 6.9
Piombino Tuscany 5,036 5.6
Portoferraio Tuscany 3,927 4.4
Olbia Sardinia 3,567 4.0
Livorno Tuscany 3,251 3.6
Civitavecchia Lazio 2,677 3.0
Genoa Liguria 2,510 2.8
La Maddalena Sardinia 2,374 2.6
Palau Sardinia 2,364 2.6
Ischia Porto Campania 2,342 2.6
Palermo Sicily 1,949 2.2
Sorrento Campania 1,887 2.1
Other 24,423 27.1
Italy 90,157 100.0

Read more about this topic:  Transport In Italy

Famous quotes containing the words ports and and/or ports:

    All places that the eye of heaven visits
    Are to a wise man ports and happy havens.
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    It is true, we are such poor navigators that our thoughts, for the most part, stand off and on upon a harborless coast, are conversant only with the bights of the bays of poesy, or steer for the public ports of entry, and go into the dry docks of science, where they merely refit for this world, and no natural currents concur to individualize them.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)