A new £35 million (41 million euros) cement terminal at the Port of Liverpool could do more than supply construction sites. It may signal a further evolution into reborn rail freight operations for the city. With recent investment in track, terminals, and infrastructure, rail freight is steadily regaining prominence around Liverpool’s docklands.
The deep-water facility, led by Medcem and Peel Ports, sits at the centre of an increasingly strategic freight cluster, benefiting from multimodal access and sitting within a region actively planning to boost the role of rail freight in the bulk and multimodal supply chains.
Gateway on Gladstone Dock
The new cement terminal will occupy 5.75 acres at the former P&O berth on Gladstone Dock, where construction is now imminent. Four massive silos, capable of holding 45,000 tonnes of cementitious material, will form the centrepiece of the facility. It’s designed to support the booming demand for low-carbon concrete across Britain.
Andrew Martin, Peel Ports’ Group Development Director, highlighted the wider logistics value. “By creating smarter, more sustainable import hubs like this one, we can help building firms secure the materials they need,” he said. “Modern ports like ours do far more than handle cargo over the quayside. We offer processing and storage facilities that streamline construction logistics, reduce road freight, and accelerate delivery timelines.”
Reinforcing Liverpool’s freight potential
Though not rail-served at the berth, the Medcem terminal is strategically positioned within Liverpool’s rail freight hinterland. Gladstone Dock is just metres from the Canada Dock branch line, the primary rail artery into the port. With the Bootle and Olive Mount upgrades behind it, and strategic SRFI proposals ahead, this project is in line to benefit from growing rail capability.
“This project reinforces Liverpool’s role as a base for investment that can drive regional, national and international growth,” Martin added, emphasising the area’s multimodal opportunities and future logistics scalability.
Bootle upgrade sets precedent
The groundwork for this momentum was laid with the 2021 completion of an £8.3 million Network Rail upgrade on the Bootle branch. A bottleneck was eased by redoubling 400 metres of track, allowing two freight trains per hour each way. At a stroke, that doubled capacity and helped futureproof the line for bulk cargo flows. 45,000 tonnes of cement (in those new silos) suggests that bulk rail freight transport would be advantageous.
Arrived. Another freight train about to enter the port. Image: © Peel Ports.
The project has been praised for helping shift freight from road to rail. The Rail Minister at the time, Chris Heaton-Harris, called the Bootle project “a vital step” toward sustainable logistics, enhancing Liverpool’s ability to handle deep-sea containers and bulk products, like cement, directly from dock to destination.
Intermodal resurgence on the Mersey
Liverpool’s freight revival is not limited to cement. Maritime Transport opened a new intermodal terminal at Seaforth in 2024, with space for 2,000 TEU and rail connectivity. This adds to the existing Liverpool2 container terminal, which is already handling close to one million TEU annually. Since 2021, containers have been transferred via rail to Birmingham, with onward shipping worldwide.
Intermodal containers at Liverpool, soon to be joined by cement and aggregates. Image: © Peel Ports
On a regional level, two designated Strategic Rail Freight Interchange (SRFI) projects are advancing in the city region. A 500-acre site at Newton-le-Willows is slated for a new rail-linked logistics park, while the Parkside East site near St Helens, about 15 miles (24km) from the docks, will receive traffic from Liverpool, and is also being developed with freight rail in mind. Off-dock warehousing is important, given limited space at Liverpool and a national under supply of modern facilities.
Canada Dock branch ripe for next steps
Looking further back, the Canada Dock branch’s double-tracking and the 2008 reopening of the Olive Mount chord restored direct access from the port to the West Coast Main Line. The UK government’s 2009 electrification strategy, although since superseded, still references the Canada Dock line. Its future electrification could offer clean, efficient freight haulage into and out of the docks, while also enabling cost-effective passenger services along the same corridor.
Cementing the region’s modal shift ambitions, and the UK government’s hugely ambitious target of building 1.5 million new homes by 2029, the Medcem cement terminal comes at a critical moment. Bulk flows of cement and building materials lend themselves to rail, assuming the onward infrastructure is in place.