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Up to the end of the Eighteenth Century, port activity was governed by naval considerations, and navigation began to play a role only with the development of the port at Rouen.
Between the two World Wars, various types of cargo traffic continued to expand, this being particularly true for petroleum traffic and passenger liners run by French (cf. the liner Normandie) and foreign shipping lines.
The port was largely destroyed by the end of the Second World War. The decision to reconstruct was taken on the basis of the 1939 port layout and was completed in 1965.
This is followed by the opening of a shipping canal (the future Le Havre Grand Canal) progressively allowing access for seagoing vessels to the extensive alluvial plain where new industrial complexes were beginning to be set up
Container traffic undergoes rapid expansion (from less than 100,000 to 2 million TEU). Several terminals are constructed specifically to accommodate the container ships of the time (capacities between 6,000 and 8,000 TEU):
The very high level of demand for crude oil prior to the 1973 oil crisis leads the port and CIM (Compagnie Industrielle Maritime) to make plans for the construction of a specialist terminal to accommodate 550,000 dwt supertankers: in 1975 the Antifer oil terminal comes on stream.
2019 to today: finalisation of the port with the Phase 3 construction programme and the final two berths.