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In 1850, Liege had no port worthy of the name, no warehouse or handling site. Only a few shores allowed goods to be docked and transhipped. Since then, numerous works have transformed the course of the Meuse, but the management of all of Liege's port land, quays and shores remained incoherent.
In 1937, the State created the Autonomous Port of Liege and entrusted it with the management of various public ports.
In 1939, the Albert Canal was inaugurated at the International Water Exhibition. Navigation in the Mosane, then limited to 600 tonnes, increased to 2,000 tonnes, enabling Liege to serve not only Antwerp and the North Sea but also Rotterdam.
Since 1964, tonnages transhipped in public ports have already exceeded five million!
In 1969, the Port Autonome de Liege saw its port operating area extended to cover the entire Liege industrial region, i.e. from Engis, upstream of Liege, to Visé. As a result, the operating area was extended from 20 to over 40 km. As a direct consequence of this expansion, traffic has reached 17.7 million tonnes.