(a) Highlight three advantages-and three disadvantages of water transport
(b) Explain any four factors-that hinder the use of water transport
(a) Advantages and disadvantages of water transport
Three advantages:
Cheapest for bulky goods: ships and barges can carry very large, heavy cargoes (oil, grain, ores) over long distances at low cost per tonne.
Natural, ready-made routes: seas, oceans, rivers and lakes provide free routeways, so little construction is needed compared with roads and railways.
Low fuel and maintenance cost per unit carried, and it links many countries and continents, promoting international trade.
Three disadvantages:
Very slow, so it is unsuitable for perishable goods and urgent deliveries.
Limited routes: it can serve only places on or near navigable water, and needs feeder transport to reach inland destinations.
Affected by weather and needs costly port facilities; storms, fog, ice and shallow water can delay or endanger vessels.
(b) Four factors that hinder the use of water transport
Shallow water, rapids, waterfalls and sand bars that block or interrupt navigation on rivers.
Seasonal changes in water level (low water in the dry season, floods in the wet season) that make some rivers navigable only part of the year.
Silting of channels, ports and river mouths, and the growth of aquatic weeds, which obstruct vessels.
Freezing of rivers and lakes in cold regions, and adverse weather such as storms and fog; also the high cost of dredging and building/maintaining harbours.
(a) Advantages and disadvantages of water transport
Three advantages:
Cheapest for bulky goods: ships and barges can carry very large, heavy cargoes (oil, grain, ores) over long distances at low cost per tonne.
Natural, ready-made routes: seas, oceans, rivers and lakes provide free routeways, so little construction is needed compared with roads and railways.
Low fuel and maintenance cost per unit carried, and it links many countries and continents, promoting international trade.
Three disadvantages:
Very slow, so it is unsuitable for perishable goods and urgent deliveries.
Limited routes: it can serve only places on or near navigable water, and needs feeder transport to reach inland destinations.
Affected by weather and needs costly port facilities; storms, fog, ice and shallow water can delay or endanger vessels.
(b) Four factors that hinder the use of water transport
Shallow water, rapids, waterfalls and sand bars that block or interrupt navigation on rivers.
Seasonal changes in water level (low water in the dry season, floods in the wet season) that make some rivers navigable only part of the year.
Silting of channels, ports and river mouths, and the growth of aquatic weeds, which obstruct vessels.
Freezing of rivers and lakes in cold regions, and adverse weather such as storms and fog; also the high cost of dredging and building/maintaining harbours.