About Port of Alaska in Anchorage
Port of Alaska is a Municipality of Anchorage owned facility that serves all of Alaska and the nation. It is Alaska’s most versatile port that handled 5.2 million tons of fuel and freight in 2022, including containers, liquid bulk, dry bulk, break bulk, and cruise ships too. About half of all Alaska inbound cargo crosses Port of Alaska docks, about half of which is delivered to final destinations outside of Anchorage – statewide, including Southeast. It leverages hundreds of millions of dollars of public and private infrastructure, including more than 125 acres of cargo-handling yard, 3.1 million barrels of liquid fuel storage, 60,000 tons of cement storage, gantry cranes, RO-RO trestles, and a large, skilled workforce. It is located on upper Cook Inlet, adjacent to Alaska’s population center and primary road, marine, air, rail and pipeline cargo distribution systems. Upper Cook Inlet has the highest tides in the United States and range almost 40 feet. NOAA tide predictions for Port of Alaska typically range between low tides down to minus five feet and high tides that exceed plus 33 feet, with a mean daily tide range of 26.2 feet. Anchorage’s extreme tides are driven by Upper Cook Inlet’s constricted geography and the configuration of northern hemisphere land masses. Local weather conditions intensify Anchorage’s tide fluctuations.


Installations
Port Information
Téléphone
Berth Sizes
Profondeur à la marée basse moyenne
Manœuvrabilité
Channel Marking
Port d'entrée
Overseas Visitor Berths
Type de quai
Style Side To
Tidal Flow
Weather Forecast
- Light and variable.
- −3°C
- Calm sea
- UV Index: 0 - Low
- Rain
- S 1–9 knots.
- −3 to 0°C
- Calm sea
- UV Index: 0 - Low
- Cloudy
- S 2–9 knots.
- −2 to 1°C
- Calm sea
- UV Index: 0 - Low
- Cloudy