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dry+port+of+the+community+of+madrid Latitude and Longitude:

40°25′52″N 3°34′16″W / 40.431°N 3.571°W / 40.431; -3.571
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Dry Port of Madrid, also known as the Dry Port of Coslada, is a logistics platform for the distribution of goods located in the Spanish municipality of Coslada, near Madrid.

Description

The draft project for the dry port traces back to 1995. [1] The start of operations took place in 2001, through the link to the ports of Algeciras, Valencia, Bilbao and Barcelona. [2] [1] The port of Valencia early consolidated as the main synergy hoarder vis-à-vis the activity of the Dry Port of Coslada, amounting for the 92% of the freight volume by 2016. [2] After the purchase of the stocks of Noatum by the Chinese company COSCO Shipping Ports, the management of the terminal, transferred to Conte Rail, became controlled by Cosco. [3] It has its own customs service. [4]

References

  1. ^ a b Escarraga, Tatiana; Zafra, Ángel (8 July 2002). "El 'puerto seco' de Coslada se convertirá en la quinta aduana marítima de España". El País.
  2. ^ a b Zaragoza, José Luis (25 January 2016). "El puerto logra el 92 % del tráfico ferroviario de Madrid". Levante-EMV.
  3. ^ Romero, Víctor (21 October 2017). "El 'procés' amenaza el plan del Puerto de Barcelona para asaltar los tráficos de Madrid". El Confidencial.
  4. ^ Peinado, Fernando (11 February 2019). "Coslada, la 'milla de oro' de las compras online". El País. Retrieved 14 February 2019.

40°25′52″N 3°34′16″W / 40.431°N 3.571°W / 40.431; -3.571


dry+port+of+the+community+of+madrid Latitude and Longitude:

40°25′52″N 3°34′16″W / 40.431°N 3.571°W / 40.431; -3.571
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Dry Port of Madrid, also known as the Dry Port of Coslada, is a logistics platform for the distribution of goods located in the Spanish municipality of Coslada, near Madrid.

Description

The draft project for the dry port traces back to 1995. [1] The start of operations took place in 2001, through the link to the ports of Algeciras, Valencia, Bilbao and Barcelona. [2] [1] The port of Valencia early consolidated as the main synergy hoarder vis-à-vis the activity of the Dry Port of Coslada, amounting for the 92% of the freight volume by 2016. [2] After the purchase of the stocks of Noatum by the Chinese company COSCO Shipping Ports, the management of the terminal, transferred to Conte Rail, became controlled by Cosco. [3] It has its own customs service. [4]

References

  1. ^ a b Escarraga, Tatiana; Zafra, Ángel (8 July 2002). "El 'puerto seco' de Coslada se convertirá en la quinta aduana marítima de España". El País.
  2. ^ a b Zaragoza, José Luis (25 January 2016). "El puerto logra el 92 % del tráfico ferroviario de Madrid". Levante-EMV.
  3. ^ Romero, Víctor (21 October 2017). "El 'procés' amenaza el plan del Puerto de Barcelona para asaltar los tráficos de Madrid". El Confidencial.
  4. ^ Peinado, Fernando (11 February 2019). "Coslada, la 'milla de oro' de las compras online". El País. Retrieved 14 February 2019.

40°25′52″N 3°34′16″W / 40.431°N 3.571°W / 40.431; -3.571


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