The first years proved a difficult start for Germany’s only deep water port, Wilhelmshaven’s Jade-Weser-Port container hub was inaugurated in 2012, but its operators are now seeking to make it a top terminal for supersize ships.
The head of the Eurogate container terminal on Germany’s North Sea coast, Mikkel Andersen, smiles as he watches the busy comings and goings down on the quay from up high in his office.
Among the vessels docked below is a ship with a carrying capacity of 6,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU).
IMPORT TERMINAL
That is still a featherweight compared with the supersize ships of 15,000 TEU or more that the port was built for.
Yet despite already ranking as Germany’s largest naval base and the largest import terminal for crude oil, Wilhelmshaven — around 100km from Bremen — hopes the Jade-Weser-Port Container Terminal can catapult it into the world’s premier league.
With the nearby ports of Hamburg and Bremerhaven unable to handle the new supersize ships, Wilhelmshaven is seeking to give Rotterdam and Antwerp a run for their money and become the main stopping point in Europe for giant container vessels arriving from Asia.
“The boats are getting ever larger, longer and higher” as shipping companies seek economies of scale, says Soenke Maatsch from the Institute of Shipping Economics and Logistics (ISL) in Bremen.
GIANT SHIPS
Few ports around the world are able to handle the new giant container ships, sometimes measuring up to 400m in length, or have the necessary sea depth for them to dock.
In Hamburg, the wind and tide can make it difficult for the giant ships to anchor, leading to delays that can be very expensive for shipping companies.
Wilhelmshaven’s 18m deep port allows the huge new ships to dock fully loaded, independent of the tide at any time of night or day.
Until recently, however, the 1 billion euro (US$1.09 billion) port, funded by public money from the regional states of Bremen and Lower Saxony, was deserted.
“We’ve had a very difficult period,” Andersen said.
“Before it was opened, the project was more than 10 years in the planning,” during the time of the 2008 financial crisis and the subsequent slump in international trade, he said.
“As a result of the crisis, business volumes were reduced and additional capacity was unused. That was one of the reasons why the port was in difficulty,” Maatsch of ISL said.
The failure of a planned tie-up between three of the world’s biggest shipping companies also hurt the port, which had to wait for Danish giant Maersk Line, the world’s biggest container ship group, and the Italian-Swiss company MSC to tie the knot last year before customers started to arrive.
INCREASED WORK
With no work to do, 300 of the terminal’s 350 employees were compelled to go on part-time hours, and forgo part of their salary for a year in exchange for a job guarantee.
But now, “there’s a lot of work” and overtime hours are building up, Andersen said.
Since February, three long-distance services leave from Wilhelmshaven every week for ports in China, Japan, the Middle East or India.
Smaller ships from Scandinavia also frequently dock there.
“We’re noticing very large interest on the part of customers these past few months,” Andersen said.
The port has managed to convince chemicals giant BASF and coffee and consumer goods retailer Tchibo to transit their goods via Wilhelmshaven.
FULL CAPACITY
Andersen did not provide any concrete numbers, but said there would be “no comparison” between this year’s business and the slim takings of 2013 and last year, when around 70,000 TEU were turned around.
According to ISL’s estimates, the port handled around 200,000 TEU of goods in the first six months of this year.
Even if no one is willing to predict when the port is to start making a profit, ISL thinks the container port might be running at full capacity — 2.7 million TEU per year — in 10 or 15 years’ time.
Down on the docks, activity stays busy until the evening. Like every week now, one of the biggest container ships in the world, with 18,000 TEU, is scheduled to arrive from China.
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