International Women’s Day: Meet the women who operate automated cranes at Vizhinjam international port in Thiruvananthapuram
The Hindu
International Women’s Day: Women operators at Vizhinjam port handle CRMG cranes, creating history in India's first automated international port.
As we make our way to the Port Operations Building (POB) inside the expanding Vizhinjam international port in Thiruvananthapuram on a sweltering afternoon, we expect to hear the buzz of vehicles and people moving around. However, near-deafening silence welcomes us. But once we are inside the POB, the scene changes. All the action happens here, in the remote control operations (RCO) room, where a bunch of trained hands monitor, plan and operate the movement of vessels and cargo that leave and arrive at the port.
Among them we see three women, wearing uniforms of pigeon blue shirts and trousers, glued to huge screens, as they monitor the stocking of containers in the yard. They operate CRMG (Cantilever Rail-Mounted Gantry) cranes, which are ‘mounted on rails and move along the dock to lift or transport containers. They are among the nine women CRMG operators who have created history as Vizhinjam port is the only automated port in India and is India’s first international multi-purpose deep water seaport project.
There are 24 CRMG cranes at the port. An operator’s work involves handling the loading and unloading of cargo from the ITV (Internal transit or transportation or transfer vehicle) to the yard and vice versa. The crane is controlled from a remote console. The operator can see the crane’s position, status, and performance on a screen, which displays real-time data and video feeds from the crane’s sensors and cameras. The command is given using a joystick.
“The focus has been on skill development and sustainable income generation as per the company’s CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) and CER (Corporate Environment Responsibility) intervention. We are also committed to the empowerment of women. The objective was to create career opportunities for women, especially those living in the project area, in port-related works, which entails the use of technology,” says an official with the Adani Vizhinjam Port Private Ltd, which is operating the port. The crane operators have been trained at the port under the guidance of Adani Skill Development Centre, which has various port-related courses.
Applications were invited from degree or diploma holders and the requirement was announced through local resources and institutions. Karthika L, Sreedevi AV, Ashalekshmi P, Anisha S, Prinu P, Steffy Rebeira, Nathana Mary JD, Rejitha RN and Sunitha Raj L are the nine operators, who work with 11 men in the section.
Karthika, 27, is the seniormost, having joined the company before the first batch of cranes arrived at Vizhinjam in October 2023. This diploma holder in instrumentation and engineering has the experience of having operated the RTG (rubber tired gantry) cranes at DP World-run international container trans-shipment project at Vallarpadam in Kochi. “In RTGs, you manually control the crane sitting inside a cabin with the joystick. But CRMG is a different space in terms of the technology and the job profile,” says Karthika.
She underwent a month-long training in Gujarat, where she learned how RMGs lifted containers from trains and also worked in simulated cranes. “I was overjoyed when I got a job at a highly-anticipated project like Vizhinjam port. A memorable moment was when we were allowed to board the first mothership San Fernando when it berthed at the port [on July 11, 2024]. I was there when the first container was lifted. Being the lone woman in that initial batch of seven crane operators it was a privilege,” Karthika says.