Termont Montreal Orders Liebherr Cranes

May 13, 2020

Photo: Liebherr
Photo: Liebherr

Termont Montreal Inc. places order with Liebherr for STS and RMG cranes.

The new STS and RMG cranes will operate at Termont’s Viau Terminal. The terminal opened in 2016 and quickly reached capacity. The new Liebherr equipment will help the terminal increase its capacity to 600,000 Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit containers (TEU) and help maximize container handling potential on the Island of Montreal.

The new cranes will join five Liebherr STS cranes and eleven Liebherr RTGs already in operation at Termont Montreal.

The new STS crane is a twin lift model identical to previously supplied cranes and features an outreach of 48 meters, a backreach of 15.24 meters, a span of 18.29 meters and a lift height over rail of 33.5 meters.

The RMG is Liebherr’s first RMG sale in Canada and has a safe working load of 65 tonnes under twinlift spreader. With a span of 36.6 meters, a lift height over rail of 18.5 meters and a single cantilever of 17 meters, the machine will stack containers one over five high. During quieter periods, the crane will carry out fully automatic stack housekeeping. However, in the event of an exception, the RMG can be controlled via a remote operator. To help comply with the strict environmental conditions at the port, the RMG features a super quiet machinery trolley with extensive sound dampening features.

Logistics News

APA Applauds Withdrawal of NARW Speed Restriction Regulations

APA Applauds Withdrawal of NARW Speed Restriction Regulations

Baldwin Applauds Shipbuilding Report, Calls on Trump to Act

Baldwin Applauds Shipbuilding Report, Calls on Trump to Act

Port of Long Beach Marks 20 Years of Leading Green

Port of Long Beach Marks 20 Years of Leading Green

FSG Nobiskrug Shipyards negotiations at "advanced stage"

FSG Nobiskrug Shipyards negotiations at "advanced stage"

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Asian spot LNG slips amidst healthy stocks, weak demand
Hungary imported 7.6 bcm of gas via Turkstream pipeline in 2024
Tens of thousands sign up with student-led protests in Belgrade