Storage Solutions
Gleadell can move large volumes of wet grain ex the farm at harvest.
The farmer is paid against the wet weight of the grain with an agreed
scale of allowances.
This solution has proved to be an attractive alternative to the
expensive method of Central Storage.
To find out more about our scale of charges click
here.
LATEST ABP INVESTMENT BOOSTS GLEADELL GRAIN FACILITY
AT IMMINGHAM
Associated British Ports (ABP) is set to invest £3.26
million in the construction of a dedicated agribulks storage facility
at its Port of Immingham, following the signing of a new 20-year
agreement with long-standing customer Gleadell Agriculture Limited.

ABP will demolish an obsolete shed on land adjacent to the port's
No. 5 Quay, to make way for a new 3,500 sq m storage facility for
Gleadell – the port's sole grain shipper and one of the foremost
grain exporters and traders in the UK. The facility will help Gleadell
service, and expand, its current operations by enabling the company
to accommodate growing shipments of imported grain products in purpose-built
dockside grain storage, as well as providing transit storage for
its wide range of export products. It is expected that construction
work on the project will commence imminently and be completed by
early autumn this year.
“Gleadell has been at the forefront of the UK's grain-export market
for over 20 years and has exported over 15 million tonnes of grain
from Immingham during this period. Our long-term relationship with
ABP is now cemented into the future. This facility will give us
the flexibility to import or export in what will be a fluid, fast-moving
grain market in the years ahead and enables us to offer our farmer
customers and our end-user customers purpose-built dockside storage.
Also, we see the possible expansion of the bio-fuel industry in
the immediate vicinity of the port creating new demand for grain
storage,” says David Sheppard, Managing Director of Gleadell.
In July 2002, Gleadell invested £1.25 million in a shiploader
for its grain-export operation at Immingham Dock and currently exports
approximately 500,000 tonnes of product every year. The company
also imports a wide range of grain products for customers throughout
the United Kingdom.
Nick Palmer, ABP Port Director, Grimsby & Immingham, commented,
“While ABP Immingham is renowned as a leading port for the coal
and roll-on/roll-off trades, it is also an important hub for a diverse
range of cargoes, such as agribulks. Not only will this new investment
help maintain our important, long-standing relationship with Gleadell,
it will also ensure that the port continues to benefit from handling
a wide spread of trades.”
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