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Monday, May 20, 2013  

New port to change shape of Dutch coast
ROTTERDAM Four years ago, Queen Beatrix gave Rotterdam the final nod to extend her kingdom into the North Sea to expand Europe’s largest harbour – and forever change the shape of the Dutch coast.

Planned for 15 years, the Dutch monarch’s signature was a final requirement to set in motion one of the largest maritime construction projects of its kind in the Netherlands in 70 years – extending the Port of Rotterdam by an area equivalent to more than 3,000 football fields.

Next year, when the first phase of the Maasvlakte 2 project is completed, a new harbour stretching 3 km into the sea will have risen 23 metres from the sea floor.

Built at a total cost of 3 billion euros ($3.6 billion) Maasvlakte 2 is seen as the crown jewel at the entrance of the iconic Port of Rotterdam, Europe’s largest and the world’s fourth-largest harbour.

“This project has forever changed the shape of the Dutch coastline,” Port of Rotterdam director Rene van der Plas said. “We needed more space and the only way was movement into  the North Sea.”But Maasvlakte 2 will also forever change the way the port does business.

By 2033, when its four deep-water basins become fully operational the new addition will nearly double the port’s current capacity of handling 19 million containers per year to 36 million.  It will allow super-sized container ships larger than aircraft carriers to dock around the clock and push Rotterdam’s sea traffic from a current 34,000 to an estimated 57,000 ships per year by 2035.

“The Port of Rotterdam will remain a key European transportation hub in future years,” said Rommert Dekker, professor in quantitative logistics at the Erasmus School of Economics at Erasmus University in Rotterdam.

“Because Maasvlakte 2 is designed as a whole new harbour and not built on an existing infrastructure it will have the newest of the new technology available,” he said. It was also specifically designed to handle the new larger container ships.

Over the last decade their capacity has nearly doubled to 18,000 containers, but their size swollen to some 400 metres long and 60 metres wide.

“These ships will need rapid on-and-off-loading cycles — which Maasvlakte 2 can provide,” Dekker said.

Coupled with an excellent combination of barges, rail and road infrastructure, Dekker said Rotterdam will continue to outperform ports in Europe, he said.

And despite the current economic crisis in Europe, container traffic was expected to grow, Dekker added, saying “even with the lowest growth scenario, container traffic is expected to double by 2030.”

 Building Maasvlakte 2 is a massive undertaking — more than 40 times the size of the Vatican — but just the type of project the Dutch have honed to a fine art over hundreds of years.

Since September 2008, up to 11 dredgers at a time have been sucking up sand off the Dutch coastline and dumping it in the area where the new port today is taking shape.

Agence France-Presse
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