Portsmouth International Port: 50 facts for 50 years

News imagePortsmouth International Port A crowd of people make their way along the port on the open day.Portsmouth International Port
An open day took place at the port to mark the anniversary

It is 50 years since Portsmouth City Council created Portsmouth International Port.

A light has been shone on the port's history as part of the Portsmouth100 celebrations which themselves are marking the centenary since Portsmouth was first granted city status in 1926.

In its own time the port has enabled faster ferry travel, acted as a film set, and provided a gateway for millions and millions of bananas.

So here are 50 facts you may not know about Portsmouth International Port...

News imagePortsmouth International Port	​​​​ An aerial black and white photo from the 70s. Long gone buildings line the coast.Portsmouth International Port ​​​​
Ferry companies called on the council to construct a ferry port to cut travel times in the 1970s
  • The port opened on 17 June 1976
  • It is now the UK's biggest municipal port, owned and operated by Portsmouth City Council
  • Brittany Ferries' newly acquired ship the Armorique was the first sailing, on a new route from Portsmouth to St Malo, a service still going strong today
  • The land was previously occupied by a large gasometer container, workshops, disused cemetery Mile End Gardens, and mudflats
  • It is situated near to Portsmouth Historic Dockyard – home of legendary warships such as HMS Victory and the Mary Rose - and Portsmouth Naval Base, both sites which predate the port by hundreds of years
News imagePortsmouth International Port Another aerial photo. A cylindrical gasometer, buildings and a patch of ground are visible.Portsmouth International Port
In 1970 the land was occupied by a gasometer, workshops, a disused cemetery, and mudflats
  • The Camber, part of the port complex which deals with smaller vessels, is the site of Portsmouth's oldest commercial docks dating back to about 1180
  • The modern port's origins date back to the early 1970s when ferry companies called on the council to construct a ferry port to cut an hour off the time it took to cross the channel from Southampton to France and Spain
  • It offers more ferry routes than any other UK ferry port, serving Caen, Cherbourg, Le Havre, and St Malo in France, Bilbao and Santander in Spain, Guernsey and Jersey in the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Wight
  • The Hoverspeed Great Britain, which berthed at the port, claimed The Hale's Trophy in 1990 for the fastest crossing of the Atlantic
  • Brittany Ferries' Normandie became the first cruise ferry and first purpose-built ferry to operate from the port in 1992
News imagePortsmouth International Port Caravans line up to board a ferry in a photo from the 80s or 90s.Portsmouth International Port
The port reduced the time it took to cross the channel from Southampton to France and Spain
News imagePortsmouth International Port Cars in the port car park, possibly in the 90s. One has a canoe on its roof. Portsmouth International Port
It offers more ferry routes than any other UK ferry port
  • The port was the first in the UK to install quick release mooring hooks on its berths, making the operation safer and faster
  • It became a Hollywood film set in 2017 for the Joan Collins, Pauline Collins and Franco Nero movie The Time of Their Lives. The film currently has an 18% score on Rotten Tomatoes
  • Saga's Spirit of Adventure became the first ship to be named at the port during a ceremony in July 2021
  • Virgin Voyages' first worldwide sailing from Portsmouth took place in August 2021 with the cruise line's maiden ship Scarlet Lady
  • About 30 cruise operators currently use the port
News imagePortsmouth International Port The frontage of the passenger terminal, possibly in the 90s.Portsmouth International Port
The numbers of passengers going through the port has continued to grow over the years
  • More than 70 cruise ships will make a stop at the port in 2026
  • Six of these vessels will visit for the first time
  • The council says each cruise call has the ability to generate up to £1.5m for the city's economy
  • A terminal extension opened in August 2023 and is carbon neutral, using seawater technology to heat and cool the building
  • It has been named The Ayrton Berth, after Portsmouth-born engineer, mathematician, physicist, suffragette and inventor Hertha Ayrton
News imagePortsmouth International Port Freight boxes are unloaded from a vessel at the dockside in another vintage picture.Portsmouth International Port
Its freight business was booming by the 1980s
  • It is also aiming to be the UK's leading sustainable port through its use of solar canopies, living walls, and a £30m shore power scheme, designed to stop ships burning fuel while berthed
  • It wants to reach net zero by 2030 and become zero emission by 2050
  • The largest ship to visit Portsmouth was TUI's Mein Schiff 3 in 2023 which carried 2,000 German passengers and surpassed the size of aircraft carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales
  • The port has five cruise and ferry berths
  • It also has two deep-water cargo berths
News imagePortsmouth International Port The Scarlett Lady sails through Portsmouth, the Spinnaker Tower in the background.Portsmouth International Port
Virgin Voyages' first worldwide sailing from Portsmouth took place with the cruise line's maiden ship Scarlet Lady
  • This is because the port also has a freight business, which was booming by the 1980s
  • Each year £7.5bn worth of cargo comes through, with 2.9m tonnes handled annually
  • Last year 291,090 tonnes of fruit came into the port
  • It is responsible for at least 50% of the UK's bananas, though this has risen as high as 70%
  • Undercover officers intercepted cocaine with a street value of about £200m in a cargo of bananas from Colombia in 2021
News imagePortsmouth International Port The huge Mein Schif, also sailing past the tower.Portsmouth International Port
The largest ship to visit Portsmouth was TUI's Mein Schiff 3
  • A dock worker was also jailed in 2022 for conspiring to import £118m of cocaine into the UK in a shipment of – you guessed it – bananas
  • Last year the cargo ship Baltic Klipper was on its way to the port when containers full of bananas spilled into the sea
  • Food, drink, clothing, cars, steel, building materials, and wind blades are also among the freight
  • Animals come through the port from time to time too, such as those on their way to Monkey World in Dorset
  • A gorilla is also expected to drop by in the near future!
News imagePortsmouth International Port Large solar panels over the dockside.Portsmouth International Port
It is aiming to be the UK's leading sustainable port
  • All of the Christmas trees for the Channel Islands pass through the port each year
  • It's not just Christmas - 95% of everything consumed on the Channel Islands is shipped from Portsmouth
  • Crane operators at the site can lift, in tandem, a combined weight of up to 250 tonnes
  • The port employs 92 people directly onsite
  • Annually it brings more than £10.8m to the council's budget
News imagePortsmouth International Port A close up of a ship berthed at the port.Portsmouth International Port
The port claims to contribute £195m to the local economy each year
  • It claims to contribute £195m to the local economy each year, and £400m to the national economy
  • Oxford Economics' latest report found the most traded products were power generators worth £2bn
  • 1.6m passengers use the port each year
  • This includes 131,000 cruise passengers
  • An open day at the port last weekend attracted its largest attendance to date, with 2,200 people taking part in harbour tours and onboard vessel visits
News imagePortsmouth International Port People gather on the dock on an open day.Portsmouth International Port
The open day attracted 2,200 people who took part in harbour tours and onboard vessel visits