The Port of Manzanillo, when measured by volume of cargo, is México’s busiest port. The Administración Portuaria Integral (API) de Manzanillo S.A. de C.V. is the port authority for the Port of Manzanillo. API Manzanillo is a federal agency created in 1993 with a 50-year concession to administer, promote, build, develop, and maintain the Port of Manzanillo.
API’s mission is to make positive contributions to production chains for national and international traffic that also contributes to the region’s economic growth. Seeking to increase the ports capacity, the Port of Manzanillo’s API made improvements in the early 2000’s that included dredging the channels and turning basins to 16 meters, widening the north turning basin, constructing new docks, dredging waterfront areas to create new space for development, constructing a new cargo distribution centre, and expanding the highway to Jalipa. The Port of Manzanillo serves 15 states within México and 26 shipping lines bound for 74 ports around the world.
The Puerto de Manzanillo is located in Mexico's State of Colima (Spanish) on the Pacific Ocean coast. The Puerto de Manzanillo is the main Pacific gateway for international trade with access to Mexico's most important industrial and commercial corridor in the country's western and central regions.
The Puerto de Manzanillo’s SSA México operates a 25.9-hectare TECI container terminal has 1076 meters (3530 feet) of quays with four berths. The major shippers using the TECI terminal in the Puerto de Manzanillo include APL, Hamburg Sud, Hapag-Lloyd, MOL, MSC, NYK Line, K Line America, and CCNI.
The Puerto de Manzanillo’s SSA México operates a 25.9-hectare TECI container terminal has 1076 meters (3530 feet) of quays with four berths. The major shippers using the TECI terminal in the Puerto de Manzanillo include APL, Hamburg Sud, Hapag-Lloyd, MOL, MSC, NYK Line, K Line America, and CCNI.
The four-acre Manjalba Container Terminal can serve three ships at the same time and can handle up to 120 containers per ship hour.