Cargo transhipment in North Sea Port remains stable over first six months
Looking at the different commodities handled, we again see rises in recession-sensitive products such as construction materials, petroleum products and chemical products.
Increase in liquid bulk
Broken down by cargo types, the transhipment of liquid bulk goods (7.5 million tons) grew by 5%, with increases in chemical products and fertilizers.
The transhipment of general cargo (break bulk, 5.2 million tons) rose by 4.1%, primarily thanks to increased volumes of cellulose. Wheeled cargo throughput (ro-ro, 1.9 million tons) remained steady. Dry bulk goods fell by 2% to 18 million tons. Transhipment volumes dropped in categories including oil seeds and iron ore. However, there were also increases in this segment, in particular in fertilizers and raw minerals.
UK no. 1, Russia falls further
As a result of EU sanctions, trade with Russia fell by a further 17% during the first six months of the year. Russia is now North Sea Ports tenth biggest trading partner, whereas two years ago it still held top spot. The UK is currently the ports most important trading partner, followed by the United States and Sweden.
Inland navigation increases
Cargo transhipment via inland navigation rose by 2.6% over the first six months of the year to 32.2 million tons. Throughput in liquid bulk goods increased, while the volume of dry bulk goods handled remained static.
The future
For Western European countries, growth is looking relatively limited for this year. We cautiously predict a slight growth of two percent over 2024.