Tbilisi (GBC) – Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze on Tuesday reaffirmed the government’s decision to implement the Anaklia Deepwater Port project. The prime minister said the project is strategically important for the development of the country’s transit potential and will be completed “in due time.”

As Kobakhidze told reporters, the government is currently conducting active negotiations with potential investors, although details will be announced later.

“We are focused on the investor. The main thing is that Anaklia Port will be built and the state will receive maximum profit from this project… Anaklia Port will be built in all cases and will serve the further development of our country’s transit function,” the prime minister noted.

The Anaklia Deepwater Port project is one of the most ambitious geopolitical and economic initiatives in the history of Georgia’s independence. Its idea is based on the country’s strategic location and aims to transform Georgia into a key link in the “Middle Corridor” connecting China and Central Asia with Europe. Unlike traditional ports, Anaklia’s main advantage is its depth, which will allow the country to receive large-capacity, so-called Panamax-type ships for the first time in history.

The active phase of the project began in 2016, when the Anaklia Development Consortium (ADC) won the tender. The consortium, headed by Mamuka Khazaradze and Badri Japaridze, included TBC Holding Anaklia, American Conti International, Dutch Van Oord PPP International, British Wondernet Express, Bulgarian G-Star, and investor Bob Meyer.