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Port of Rotterdam

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Port of Rotterdam
Map
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Location
Country Netherlands
Location Rotterdam,
 South Holland
Coordinates51°53′06″N 4°17′12″E / 51.8850°N 4.2867°E / 51.8850; 4.2867
UN/LOCODENL RTM[1]
Details
Opened14th century
Size of harbour4,810 ha (11,900 acres)[2]
Land area7,903 ha (19,530 acres)[2]
Size12,713 ha (31,410 acres)[2]
Employees1,100 (2016)[3]
Chief Executive OfficerAllard Castelein[4]
Chief Operating OfficerRonald Paul[4]
Chief Financial OfficerVivienne de Leeuw[4]
Statistics
Vessel arrivalsDecrease 29,476 sea ships (2018)[2]
Annual cargo tonnageIncrease 469.0 million tonnes (2018)[2]
Annual container volumeIncrease 14,512,661 TEU (2018)[2]
Annual revenueDecrease 707.2 million (2018)[2]
Inland vesselsSteady 123,859 ships (2018)[2]
Website
www.portofrotterdam.com

The Port of Rotterdam is the largest seaport in Europe and the largest outside of Asia, located in the city of Rotterdam in the province of South Holland in the Netherlands. From 1962 until 2004 it was the world's busiest port, now overtaken first by Singapore and then Shanghai. In 2018, Rotterdam was the world's eleventh-largest container port in terms of twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) handled.[5] In 2017 Rotterdam was the world's tenth-largest port in terms of annual cargo tonnage.[6]

Covering 105 square kilometres (41 sq mi), the port of Rotterdam now stretches over a distance of 40 kilometres (25 mi). It consists of the city centre's historic harbour area, including Delfshaven; the Maashaven/Rijnhaven/Feijenoord complex; the harbours around Nieuw-Mathenesse; Waalhaven; Vondelingenplaat; Eemhaven; Botlek; Europoort, situated along the Calandkanaal, Nieuwe Waterweg and Scheur (the latter two being continuations of the Nieuwe Maas); and the reclaimed Maasvlakte area, which projects into the North Sea. The Port of Rotterdam is located in the middle of the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta. Rotterdam has five port concessions (ports) within its boundaries - operated by separate companies under the overall authority of Rotterdam.

Rotterdam consists of five distinct port areas and three distribution parks that facilitate the needs of a hinterland with over 50,000,000 consumers throughout the continent of Europe.

Nieuwe Waterweg

In the first half of the 19th century the port activities moved from the centre westward towards the North Sea. To improve the connection to the North Sea, the Nieuwe Waterweg ("New Waterway"), a large canal, was designed to connect the Rhine and Meuse rivers to the sea. The Nieuwe Waterweg, designed by Pieter Caland, was to be partly dug, then to further deepen the canal bed by the natural flow of the water. Ultimately however, the last part had to be dug by manual labour as well. Nevertheless, Rotterdam from then on had a direct connection between the sea and harbour areas with sufficient depth. The Nieuwe Waterweg has since been deepened several times. It was ready in 1872 and all sorts of industrial activity formed on the banks of this canal.

Europoort and Maasvlakte extensions

The Waalhaven by night.
Satellite photography of the Port of Rotterdam.
Aerial view of the Maasvlakte area, one of the latest extensions to the port.

Over the years the port was further developed seaward by building new docks and harbour-basins. Rotterdam's harbour territory has been enlarged by the construction of the Europoort (gate to Europe) complex along the mouth of the Nieuwe Waterweg. In the 1970s the port was extended into the sea at the south side of the mouth of the Nieuwe Waterweg by completion of the Maasvlakte (Meuse-plain) which was built in the North Sea near Hoek van Holland.

In the past five years the industrialised skyline has been changed by the addition of large numbers of wind turbines taking advantage of the exposed coastal conditions. The construction of a second Maasvlakte received initial political approval in 2004, but was stopped by the Raad van State (the Dutch Council of State, which advises the government and parliament on legislation and governance) in 2005, because the plans did not take enough account of environmental issues. On 10 October 2006, however, approval was acquired to start construction in 2008, aiming for the first ship to anchor in 2013.

Characteristics

Container terminals showing a container being loaded onto an unmanned automated guided vehicle.

Most important for the port of Rotterdam is the petrochemical industry and general cargo transshipment handlings. The harbour functions as an important transit point for transport of bulk and other goods between the European continent and other parts of the world. From Rotterdam goods are transported by ship, river barge, train or road. Since 2000 the Betuweroute, a fast cargo railway from Rotterdam to Germany, has been under construction. The Dutch part of this railway opened in 2007. Large oil refineries are located west of the city. The rivers Meuse (Maas) and Rhine also provide excellent access to the hinterland.

24-metre draft

The EECV-quay of the port has a draft of 24 metres (78 feet).[7] This made it one of only two available mooring locations for one of the largest bulk cargo ships in the world, the iron ore bulk carrier MS Berge Stahl when it is fully loaded, along with the Terminal of Ponta da Madeira in Brazil,[8] until the opening of a new deep-water iron ore wharf at Caofeidian in China in 2011.[9] The ship's draft of 23 meters (75 feet) leaves only 1 metre (3 feet) of under keel clearance, therefore it can only dock in a restricted tidal window.[10] Such ships must travel in the Eurogeul.

Robotic container operations

Much of the container loading and stacking in the port is handled by autonomous robotic cranes and computer controlled chariots. Europe Container Terminals, which operates two major container terminals at the port, pioneered the development of terminal automation. At the Delta terminal, the chariots—or automated guided vehicles (AGV)—are unmanned and each carries one container. The chariots navigate their own way around the terminal with the help of a magnetic grid built into the terminal tarmac. Once a container is loaded onto an AGV, it is identified by infrared "eyes" and delivered to its designated place within the terminal. This terminal is also named "the ghost terminal".[11]

Unmanned Automated Stacking Cranes (ASC) take containers to/from the AGVs and store them in the stacking yard. The newer Euromax terminal implements an evolution of this design that eliminates the use of straddle carriers for the land-side operations.

Smart Technology

The Port Authority at the Port of Rotterdam uses the Internet of Things, a cloud-based platform, to collect and process data from sensors around the port. In May 2019, the port sent Container 42[clarification needed] out on a two-year data-collecting mission.[12]

Administration

The main office of the Port of Rotterdam
Raillinks and refineries in the Europoort area of the port.

The port is operated by the Port of Rotterdam Authority, originally a municipal body of the municipality of Rotterdam, but since 1 January 2004, a government corporation jointly owned by the municipality of Rotterdam and the Dutch State.[13]

Flood barriers

The Port of Rotterdam and its surrounding area is susceptible to a storm surge from the North Sea. As part of the Delta Works plan, the Maeslantkering flood barrier was constructed from 1991 to 1997 to protect the area. This flood barrier consists of two huge doors that normally rest in a dry dock besides the Nieuwe Waterweg. When a flood of 3 metres (9.8 ft) above NAP (mean sea level) is predicted, the barrier is activated. The dry dock is flooded, and the gates rotate around a pivot to float into position, like caissons, and sunk in place. When the water level recedes enough to open the gates, they are floated back into their docks. Another barrier, the Hartelkering, is situated in the Hartelkanaal.

Sustainability

The Port of Rotterdam aims to be emissions-free by the year 2050.[14]

Map of port

Port of Rotterdam
Port of Rotterdam

Centenary celebrations

In August 1995, the centenary of the Port of Rotterdam was celebrated in nearby Bruges.

See also

References

  1. ^ "UNLOCODE (NL) - NETHERLANDS". service.unece.org. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Port of Rotterdam. Highlights of the 2018 Annual Report". Port of Rotterdam Authority. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  3. ^ About the Port Authority portofrotterdam.com
  4. ^ a b c "Executive Board". Port of Rotterdam. 30 September 2020.
  5. ^ Top 50 World Container Ports. World Shipping Council
  6. ^ "The world's 10 biggest ports". ship-technology.com. Retrieved 17 March 2014.
  7. ^ Port of Rotterdam: Iron Ore, archived from the original on 14 November 2006
  8. ^ "Machine Support services on world's largest dry bulk carrier" Machine Support News
  9. ^ 曹妃甸港首次接卸30万吨以上铁矿石巨轮, 31 October 2011, archived from the original on 26 April 2012
  10. ^ RWS Noordzee: Tidal-window advice, Dutch Archived 9 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Will Robots Take Our Jobs? - BBC Click, retrieved 30 October 2019
  12. ^ "Port of Rotterdam: Hyper-Smart Container to Begin Round the World Trip | World Maritime News". worldmaritimenews.com. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  13. ^ "Company Profile". Archived from the original on 5 March 2010. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  14. ^ "Duurzaamheid". portofrotterdam.com. Port of Rotterdam. Retrieved 11 January 2018.