DataLiner Vessel Calls | January to December 2017-2018
Feb, 18, 2019 Posted by datamarnewsWeek 201908
The total number of vessel calls at the top 50 Brazilian ports dropped slightly by 1% to 27,068 in 2018, year-on-year. The most notable changes during this period were as follows:
- Santos saw a 1% increase in vessel calls
- Paranaguá vessel calls remained practically unchanged
- Rio Grande calls plunged 7%
- Rio de Janeiro up 12%
- Suape had 13% fewer vessel calls
- Itaguai registered a 1% rise
- Vila do Conde calls fell 11%
- Navegantes calls went down by 22%
- Pecem had 8% rise in vessel calls
- Fortaleza saw a 2% drop
- Itajai had a massive 64% increase in the number of vessel calls
Number of vessel calls in Brazilian ports | January to December 2017-2018
| wdt_ID | Port | 2017 | 2018 | %diff |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SANTOS | 4.842 | 4.875 | 1 |
| 2 | PARANAGUA | 2.150 | 2.149 | 0 |
| 3 | RIO GRANDE | 1.860 | 1.723 | -7 |
| 4 | RIO DE JANEIRO | 1.407 | 1.575 | 12 |
| 5 | SUAPE | 1.562 | 1.365 | -13 |
| 6 | PORTO DE ITAGUAI | 1.070 | 1.076 | 1 |
| 7 | PONTA DA MADEIRA | 782 | 873 | 12 |
| 8 | TUBARAO | 801 | 798 | 0 |
| 9 | VILA DO CONDE | 864 | 772 | -11 |
| 10 | SALVADOR | 854 | 749 | -12 |
| 11 | ITAQUI | 747 | 721 | -3 |
| 12 | ARATU | 821 | 719 | -12 |
| 13 | SAO SEBASTIAO | 652 | 685 | 5 |
| 14 | PECEM | 539 | 584 | 8 |
| 15 | ITAPOA | 544 | 537 | -1 |
| 16 | NAVEGANTES | 669 | 524 | -22 |
| 17 | PRAIA MOLE | 510 | 496 | -3 |
| 18 | VITORIA | 535 | 494 | -8 |
| 19 | FORTALEZA | 500 | 488 | -2 |
| 20 | SAO FRANCISCO DO SUL | 496 | 481 | -3 |
| 21 | MANAUS | 448 | 471 | 5 |
| 22 | MADRE DE DEUS | 419 | 443 | 6 |
| 23 | ITAJAI | 261 | 428 | 64 |
| 24 | ANGRA DOS REIS | 346 | 351 | 1 |
| 25 | ALUMAR | 330 | 328 | -1 |
| 26 | PORTOCEL | 365 | 309 | -15 |
| 27 | BELEM | 340 | 296 | -13 |
| 28 | IMBITUBA | 240 | 276 | 15 |
| 29 | TROMBETAS | 285 | 262 | -8 |
| 30 | MACEIO | 258 | 230 | -11 |
| 31 | ITACOATIARA | 203 | 219 | 8 |
| 32 | PARQUE DAS BALEIAS | 18 | 176 | 878 |
| 33 | TRAMANDAI | 164 | 167 | 2 |
| 34 | COARI | 155 | 165 | 6 |
| 35 | PORTO ACU | 179 | 158 | -12 |
| 36 | SANTAREM | 139 | 154 | 11 |
| 37 | RECIFE | 133 | 124 | -7 |
| 38 | JURUTI | 119 | 120 | 1 |
| 39 | RONCADOR/MARLINSUL/LESTE | 9 | 97 | 978 |
| 40 | CABEDELO | 118 | 82 | -31 |
| 41 | NATAL | 104 | 81 | -22 |
| 42 | PORTO ALEGRE | 93 | 81 | -13 |
| 43 | PORTO SUDESTE | 57 | 66 | 16 |
| 44 | AREIA BRANCA | 56 | 66 | 18 |
| 45 | ILHEUS | 38 | 47 | 24 |
| 46 | ANTONINA | 56 | 44 | -21 |
| 47 | SANTANA | 42 | 40 | -5 |
| 48 | ARACAJU | 29 | 38 | 31 |
| 49 | MUNGUBA | 39 | 36 | -8 |
| 50 | CANOAS | 11 | 29 | 164 |
| ∑ = 27.259 | ∑ = 27.068 |
Related Post
-
Ports and Terminals
Dec, 15, 2023
0
Voltalia Signs Agreement for Green Hydrogen Project at the Port of Suape
-
Automotive
May, 06, 2019
0
Brazil’s light vehicle exports slump 41.3% in Q1
-
Ports and Terminals
Jul, 24, 2024
0
Wilson Sons receives MSC’s first 366-metre supership at Salvador Container Terminal
-
Economy
Nov, 06, 2025
0
New DataLiner update: Brazilian container exports remain stable in 2025 as imports accelerate amid industrial recovery