SISAK, Mar 12 (Hina) - Transport across 230km of Croatia's largest river, the Sava, resumed on Friday after a seven-and-a-half year hiatus. "Galdovo", a ship of Dunav Lloyd from Sisak, a town 50km south-east of Zagreb, travelled from
the Ruscice oil terminal near Slavonski Brod in eastern Croatia to Crnac, a Croatian oil giant INA terminal near Sisak, delivering 1,143 tonnes of crude oil. Transport along the Sava is safe, Dunav Lloyd-Sisak director Milan Miljenovic and the inspector for transport safety of the Slavonski Bord port authorities, Ivan Jadrijevic, told reporters in Crnac. No difficulties or incidents occurred during the travel across the Sava along Croatia's state border with the Bosnian Serb entity, "Galdovo" commander Ivan Matosevic told Hina. He pointed out the reopening of the Sava navigable waterway was significant for Croatia's internal river transport, as well as for Sisak's a
SISAK, Mar 12 (Hina) - Transport across 230km of Croatia's largest
river, the Sava, resumed on Friday after a seven-and-a-half year
hiatus.
"Galdovo", a ship of Dunav Lloyd from Sisak, a town 50km south-east
of Zagreb, travelled from the Ruscice oil terminal near Slavonski
Brod in eastern Croatia to Crnac, a Croatian oil giant INA terminal
near Sisak, delivering 1,143 tonnes of crude oil.
Transport along the Sava is safe, Dunav Lloyd-Sisak director Milan
Miljenovic and the inspector for transport safety of the Slavonski
Bord port authorities, Ivan Jadrijevic, told reporters in Crnac.
No difficulties or incidents occurred during the travel across the
Sava along Croatia's state border with the Bosnian Serb entity,
"Galdovo" commander Ivan Matosevic told Hina.
He pointed out the reopening of the Sava navigable waterway was
significant for Croatia's internal river transport, as well as for
Sisak's and Croatia's shipping industry.
(hina) ha