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Special Interest Group on Maritime Transport and Ports
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INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP
Genoa - June 8-10, 2000



On the Economic Impact of Ports: Local vs. National Costs and Benefits


Marco Benacchio
Università di Genova
(benacchi@economia.unige.it)

Claudio Ferrari
Università di Genova
(ferrari@economia.unige.it)

    Hercules E. Haralambides
Erasmus University Rotterdam
(haralambides@few.eur.nl)

Enrico Musso
Università di Genova
(musso@economia.unige.it)

Abstract:

It is nowadays widely accepted that the positive economic impact of ports tends to move away from a local environment (the earlier 'port city') to a much wider and often international one, including the consignors/consignees. It is thus the purpose of this paper to take a fresh look at the current changes in a port's production function, based on a territorial cost-benefit analysis, i.e. taking into account that:

  • The port industry is no longer a labour intensive one: direct employment is decreasing, while some port-related activities tend to move to inland locations;
  • The port industry is becoming more capital deepening, but given the functioning of international capital markets, the relevant payback does not necessarily stay in full within the port region;
  • Due to horizontal and vertical integration strategies, international groups often own firms which run terminals and port activities. Quite often, port impacts on the local economy are no longer among the location selection criteria of holdings, corporations and administrative departments, who often lack managerial and leadership functions;
  • Port development requires increasingly more space (a local factor) but land allocated to port activities seems to be paid less than its opportunity cost;
  • On the other hand, ports still remain important from a national perspective: they generate taxes and duties and they often constitute growth poles for national industries (e.g. manufacturing, transport, logistics) and services;
  • Finally, the costs suffered by local economies are getting higher in terms of land consumption, coast waste, environmental problems and traffic congestion.

The existence of a disequilibrium in the territorial distribution of ports wealth is thus quite evident. For this purpose Port Impact Studies are powerful tools for assessing port impact, although there is an open debate on their main goals, on the different methodological approaches and on their role in port planning.

Finally the paper attempts to formulate some suggestions for a sustainable and efficient European port system, focusing on the role of Port Authorities, investment policies, and on the meaningful involvement of local communities in deciding the "quantum" of port development.



1. Introduction: the rationale of the concept of port impact

There is a quite evident difference between the economic concepts of output (the technical result of a production process) and that of input payback (the remuneration to the factors used in the production). The case for ports can be considered as a classical production process where land, capital, firm and labor inputs (e.g. location, space, infrastructure, superstructures, facilities, human resources, management and organizational skills) are combined in order to obtain a certain level of output (throughput).

The point is that there is a general continuous interest on ports' results, while the issue of ports input payback seems to be perceived, if not less important, at least finally referable to the traffic of the port as a direct consequence.

Ports are, in fact, internationally characterized in terms of figures mainly by their annual throughput. Each year major research institutes give the up-to-date figures of world ports traffic (TEU, tons) mainly focusing on (i) their shifts (upwards/downwards) in ranking, (ii) changes in the commodity mix (e.g. the increase in containerized traffic, the decrease in liquid bulk, etc.) and (iii) future forecasts. Anyway, when an effort is made in order to measure a phenomenon, implicitly there is also a not neutral slant in such approach. This emphasis on ports' throughputs seems to cover just one side of the medal.

What do really mean "high traffic" data?

We can say that a port that is increasing its throughput is first of all a port that is "good" for the ship and the cargo (are the shipowners, in fact, who choose the port according to their port selection criteria and shippers' demand). By the way all the efforts to evaluate port performance based on different indexes (tariffs, transit time, reliability) are always referred to the port users, and not to wealth production and distribution.

Therefore high traffic means "only" that a port is more effective than other, or that it is more strategically located close to important hinterlands and/or maritime routes. Anyway it doesn't mean as a result that the port is creating "value" to remunerate inputs.

Thus for successful ports we can think at the advantages and gains collected by port users (namely multimodal transport operators, carriers, agents, shipbrokers stevedores and traders) who extract a big share of the economic rent (wealth) produced by ports, which evermore rarely stops in the port region.

Therefore we can surely assert that ports throughput is not a correct, unique and exhaustive way for evaluating port real "performance". By doing so, the risk of a misunderstanding between the user function (the utility provided by the port for the ship and the cargo) and the production and distribution function (the inputs required for achieve that level of output, and their payback) could come about.

The paper aims at analyzing the impact of ports for local economies, and its territorial distribution from a local environment towards a global "borderless" economy, considering ports economic impact as the "source" of inputs payback. The need for a particular awareness of port impact and its evolution over time is due to two main issues:

  • The fact that nowadays there is no "automatic" relation between the above functions. The remarkable growth in seaborne traffic, in fact, doesn't mean that port economies are getting wealthier. Although is quite difficult to evaluate the impact of ports, the simple trend of traffic data, moreover in containerisation, is, in fact, getting less and less significant.
  • The fact that the link between ports and port-based economies is changing towards a weakening both in the previous ties and in the economic significance.

The paper is organized as follows. Next section (§2) will briefly analyze the importance of assessing port impact on regional economies. In §3 a survey on main causes for changing impact of ports (from an economic, territorial, environmental and social point of view) is presented. An overview of different frameworks of analysis for evaluating the real positive and negative impact of ports on local economies - with focus on the aims, methodologies, results and correct use of such studies is given - is given in §4. Finally the potential disequilibrium in ports impact (namely between a local and a wider level) is analyzed, stressing the importance of carrying the analysis beyond the local level (§5), and some open points for a sustainable port development are suggested (§6).



2. The economic vs. social trade off: the importance of estimating port impact

The proliferation in the last thirty years of Port (economic) Impact Studies (PIS), despite numerous controversies regarding the strength of these kind of studies, is an indisputable objective fact that, ultimately, proves their relevance.

National and local governments, Port Authorities and port business communities, in fact, always stress the point that the development of ports could be a key factor in the economic development (and/or redevelopment) of local economies. Moreover ports play an important role from a national perspective due to the fact that they generate taxes and duties and they often constitute growth poles for national industries (e.g. manufacturing, transport, logistics) and services, improving their competitiveness.

This emphasis on ports benefits can be considered as the driving force for a sound economic justification of expansionary goals for ports activities (typically capital and land intensive investments).

Although not formally stated in statutes, port management of public ports, in fact, could be implicitly characterized by a double aim:

  • make the port attractive to users, providing a competitive supply of services for carriers and shippers (micro-economic or entrepreneurial aim);
  • raising the welfare of its citizens, enhancing social welfare in terms of income, employment, living environment, security and other aspects (macro-economic or social aim).

Despite the even existing relations between the different goals, a clear trade-off is stated: while on one hand strategies of growth and development improve income and employment, on the other may oppose other "social" goals (e.g. the need for a clean environment, for a high quality of life, for new housing development).

And the outlined trade off is getting more and more difficult to solve, i.e. taking into account some current dynamics:

  • Due to the fact that many ports are close to the full capacity, as the volume expands external diseconomies of scale, caused by congestion and lack of space, worsen the living conditions (especially for ports located in a urban context);
  • The relation between port throughput and income and employment for port economy is weakening;
  • Fierce competition between ports is increasing and borders between traditional hinterlands are fading.

As a consequence of this schematized conflict, the expansion of the port industry should be considered, from a neutral perspective, as ex post equilibrium between positive and negative impacts of ports. Extremely simplifying, in fact, the higher is the positive impact of ports on local economies, the higher the level of port expansion that would solve the trade off equilibrium, which maximizes the local utility.

Thus, only an accurate qualitative and quantitative estimation of ports positive and negative impacts, focusing also on the implicit risks as a result of spatially concentrated costs and widely distributed benefits, can provide an important tool in the policy makers decision process regarding ports development.

There seems to be a lack of convergence on the topic: different, and sometimes opposite thoughts, concerning the role of ports for modern economies, give rise to a hot debate.

Without approaching the matter of how structuring an efficient PIS, Goss (1990) suggests at least four clear reasons for which port expansion or improvement is likely to be an inefficient tool of economic development strategy:

  • Port benefits are likely to "leak" to users in inland locations;
  • Assisting and investing public money in a port will probably mean assisting foreign exporters, some of whom will be able to compete more effectively with home producers;
  • Any public assistance to a port is likely to lead to higher local taxes (local share of infrastructure financing), running the risk to make the area less attractive to residents and possible businesses too;
  • Since the aggregate demand for labour within any given economy is determined by macroeconomics factors, ports are competing among themselves for a share of a reasonably fixed level of business (e.g. the expansion of a port belonging to a range could also be at the expense of lost trade in other regional or national ports belonging to the same range).

Even if some of the outlined points have to be considered in perspective of the current context of globalization and liberalization of the markets leading to higher competitive environment and increasing of spatial interrelations and volumes of cargo traffic (also as a consequence of the improvement of the Hub and Spoke system), Goss' argumentation still remains quite effective.

Moreover another important element has to be taken into account: most of the literature deals with the problem of port economic impact from a general perspective while it is quite evident that several local/national features can affect the analysis.

Gripaios-Gripaios (1995) and Gripaios (1999), for example, draw similar conclusions for UK ports; they provide empirical evidence suggesting that often the existing and potential role of ports in the regional development process is nowadays exaggerated.

On the other hand, looking for example at the Netherlands, NEI (1996) and Bossche (1997), emphasize, even though raising problems of sustainability of port development, the economic significance of the port of Rotterdam for local and, mainly, national economy.

The topic is evidently complex and it is worth to deeper analyze both the emerging changes in ports impact and the methodological approach in conducting a port impact study.



3. Ports changing role (and its potential consequence on impact): some economic and spatial evidence

It is nowadays widely accepted that the positive economic impact of ports tends to move away from a local environment (the earlier 'port city') to a much wider and often international one, including the consignors/consignees.

From an overall perspective, globalization and deregulation set the ground for currents economic developments in which economic frontiers tend to fade and competition tends to intensify. Deregulation also allows business companies to re-organize their production systems internationally and to capitalize on advantages of different countries and regions.

For a long time the presence of a port meant not only traffic and transport activities, but also a wide range of economic activities, ranging from industries using mainly raw materials imported by sea and whose land transportation costs would have been too high, to those producing goods to be exported by sea and/or those whose optimal location was where the break of bulk took place. Nowadays, many of these industries, no longer technologically restricted to port areas, and suffering from the relative scarcity and/or high prices of space and other inputs, have moved to regions where these inputs are available at better conditions.

Besides, technological progress in transportation (lower costs) has transformed port services market from a quasi-monopoly, where the distance from other ports "protected" each market area, to a more and more competitive market.

In this new scenario the "captive market" situation has been overthrown, and port users are more and more extracting the economic rent produced by the ports, leaving to ports production inputs an even small payback. The growing horizontal and vertical integrations involving terminal operators represent both an oligopolistic response, aiming at achieving economies of scale (horizontal integration) and the attempt of transport operators to "take over" the port and its added value (vertical integration).

Finally, innovations related to the port node have been labour saving and capital intensive, as well as - which can be considered almost unique - land intensive (namely in containerised traffic). Besides the dramatic change in benefits and costs related to the port, new and different costs for the local community must be considered, like growing levels of congestion and pollution or the loss of a large amount of public resources (the coastal space).

Greater location indifference and diseconomies of congestion have allowed production activities to move away from ports. Since this coincides with an organizational upheaval of transport cycle and a reduction in land transport costs, this caused the growth of inter-modal inland terminals, which developed scale and concentration economies, and polarized traffic and induced activities. As a result, new spatial economic patterns arose, built around the new foci and routes of the transport cycle. With evident and deep consequences on ports and economic systems of port regions (Musso, 1996).

Thus, relations between the port and its local economy get weaker. Traffic flows increase, but port operations decrease, become of lesser importance, and require less manpower. Ports no longer give place to inter-industrial linkage, so that income multiplier effects not only are less relevant, but they usually spread over industries and economies even quite far from the port. The real big risk is that more and more commodities just pass through the port without stopping and/or without inducing economies activities (the port as a simple transit point), employment and added value (Vigarie', 1991).

Port services show a decreasing payback of labour and an increasing return on capital investment. While the former is located within the local economy, the latter, namely as a consequence of above mentioned horizontal and vertical integration, seldom comes either from the local economy or even from the country itself (given the functioning of international capital markets, the relevant payback does not necessarily stay in full within the port region).

This means that the economic impact of the port tends to spread more and more over the entire area of port customers (and often also internationally), while space consumption and negative externalities increase and remain spatially concentrated in the local system. This situation potentially brings about major socio-economic conflicts.

In summary, ports' records growth in throughput has not led to a corresponding increase in the number of jobs or in added value (sometimes also for all the transport and logistic functions). Therefore growing investments in port infrastructures and technologies are leading to an ever-widening gap between, on one hand, the regional use of the resources of territory, natural potentials and tax money and, on the other hand, the regional effects on employment and added value.

In the outlined scenario, costs and benefits deriving from the port should be carefully assessed, as well as their territorial impact and economic actors taking advantage from it. Namely, it is becoming ever more important using techniques for accurately measuring positive effects of the port on the local economy. These effects are largely related to the direct and indirect employment impact within the area, since other inputs are increasingly of external or international origin (firms and capital), or do not attract a sufficient payback (land's rents).

This is relevant also from an institutional and financing point of view, which will be reconsidered in the last section. In the past ports were perceived as social capital and it was the state that developed and financed ports infrastructures because of their capacity of generating employment and other indirect positive effects on the local and regional economy. But nowadays that ports are no longer the milestone in the structure of employment for the inhabitants of the port city, who are the real beneficiaries of new, subsidized infrastructures needed to maintain ports competitive? These sound doubts are leading to a different idea behind port investments, perceived as an economic capital, till some extreme positions that argue that ports should be developed and exploited as purely economic units, where public sector could not be always the prime mover (but, in a different perspective, see Suykens, 1986).



4. Methodological approaches in Port Impact Studies

For their being "critically" important there has been a series of economic articles discussing and analyzing problems and potentials of PIS: Waters (1977), Chang (1978), Davis (1983), Yochum-Agarwal (1987, 1988), Warf-Cox (1989), DeSalvo-Fuller (1994, 1995), Gripaios-Gripaios (1995), Verbeke-Debisschop (1996), Castro-Millan (1998), Gripaios (1999), Musso-Benacchio-Ferrari (1999). Port Authorities usually invest on port impact research too. As an example, the US Maritime Administration and the New York and New Jersey Port Authority, in the late seventies, developed, a famous regional port economic impact kit, based on a special form of using input-output tables, which has been updated on several occasions and which was flexible enough to adapt to the caractheristics of small and medium-size US ports (U.S. Maritime Administration, 1979 and 1985).

4.1 Aims of PIS and the choice of economic explanatory variables

The basic aim of PIS is to show the whole of the net economic benefits for local (surrounding) communities to be associated with the existence and operation of a port. The defined general aim of PIS could be composed of different sub-goals, each of them can affect the choice of the proper methodology:

1) Facilitate the understanding of the (qualitative and quantitative) relationships that exist between the port and the regional economy;

2) Measure (also overtime) the regional economic impact caused by the presence of the ports;

3) Operate as a simulation model, quantifying the economics effects derived, for example, from investments in new infrastructure.

These positive effects can be evaluated in many different ways; conventionally they are measured by the contribution of the activities of the port sector (in a broad sense) to the level reached by some economic variables such as: employment, added value, incomes, taxes and duties.

Quite often analyses are concentrated on employment terms considered as the most satisfactory proxi of the main economic positive effects for the local system. On the other side one can argue that the added value created by the port is the best variable for assessing the role of ports as catalysts for the creation of economic wealth.

In principle it could be correct, because the concept of added value is the most comprehensive measure of the actual wealth produced by ports. It is quite evident that ports who achieve to establish industrial and logistic linkages are able to produce (and potentially extract at a local level) a wider economic rent from direct and indirect port activities.

However some remarks can be outlined on the use of the concept of added value.

First of all employment is a clear (even if rough) indicator of the payback of a typical local input (labor), while added value, which could be a more powerful estimator, refers to the wealth produced and induced by the port without providing details on its distribution. For instance, what is the share of added value that goes in taxation (local and national)? Moreover if an input such as space were free, the added value of ports would be higher, but the local impact would be lower. Therefore added value figures are useful in providing a better knowledge of ports impact jointly and not alternatively to employment figures (the ratio "added value per employee" is a good measure of the economic significance of the additional port functions).

Secondly it is an estimator whose measurement is usually more subjectively biased than the employment figures. Substantial differences can be observed as regards the definition of the value-added concept. More specifically, inter-port comparisons reveal differences in defining, calculating and determining a weighing rule for converting nominal tons into intrinsic cargo handling or value tons (Charlier, 1996). Haezendonck et al. (2000) mention at least four different weighing rules within a single range, such as the Hamburg - Le Havre range, even if, in general terms, the value added concept always aims to assess the contribution of port activities to a nation's Gross Domestic Product.

Thirdly, as well as for port-related employment, it is not clear if (and in what way) the volume and the traffic structure of ports matter in value added creation (while they are chosen as the independent explanatory variable). Moreover if value added is computed from Input-Output regional (or national) matrixes, the same advantages and drawbacks seeable for employment can be outlined.

Finally, there is no reason, due to the globalization of the economic processes and firms' ownership, to support the evidence that the higher added value produced by logistic ports as Rotterdam and Antwerp surely stop in the port region. In fact the current trend of a widening and cross-bordering port economic impact is confirmed also by added valued focused researches.

4.2 Definition of economic impact

Taking the employment as a proxi of the concept of ports economic impact we can distinguish:

  • primary (direct) impact: "all activities necessary for the operation and use of the port facilities"
  • secondary impact: "all the economic activities of the area of influence of the port (local community and hinterland) that economically depend on primary activities" (Castro-Millan, 1998).

It is not easy to avoid the risk of subjectivity in the definition of the economic activities involved.

Davis (1983) distinguished the direct effects as the employment from the set of activities necessary for the operation of the port and other activities related to the outgoing and incoming shipment of the goods and passengers. The precise relationship of this set of activities may vary from port to port, which shows, on one hand, their different economic orientation and, on the other, the absence of consensus as to what economic activities are truly necessary.

He splits secondary impact into two kinds of effects: indirect and induced. Indirect effects refer to all economic activities developed in the port region and dependent on the primary activities through a technical relationship, fundamentally of the buying and selling of goods and/or services. Induced effects refer to all activities that also take place in the wide port-region and that depend on the direct and indirect effects through "consumption" linkages.

The tri-partition of port economic effects can be considered a stable distinction in different studies.

Yochum-Agarwall (1987, 1988) proposed an interesting conceptual framework in which they provide general guidelines for conducting a port's economic impact analysis. The organization of an efficient search for port-related industries is based on three different linkages between the port and the region's economy.

  1. Employment in firms providing services necessary to the movement of waterborne commerce (port required industry). They provide:
    • transportation services (e.g. freight forwarding, transport of cargo by rail and road);
    • port services (e.g. terminal operations, stevedoring, vessel supply, pilotage, towage, ship repair, diving services, insurance, legal services)
  2. Employment in firms attracted to the region because of the presence of the port (port attracted industry). The availability and potential access to port facilities may well serve as a "magnet" to attract industries to sites located near a port. The economic advantage of close proximity to a port is such that port attracted firms would considering moving from a region if the port facilities were closed down. They typically fall into two categories:
    • firms that export commodities;
    • firms that import products or raw materials for assembly and distribution (e.g. steelworks, chemicals, refineries)
  3. Employment in firms that have expanded their markets (demand for their products) by exporting through the port (port induced industry). The port is a source of reduced transportation costs, which results in industry expansion. Such industries are typically located at a substantial distances from port facilities (and on the basis of a mere geographical criterion they would not be correctly identified). They are port dependent in that cost-effective access to the port affects demand for the firm's products. Such industries however could be located in the region regardless of the availability of port facilities (therefore is much more difficult to establish their degree of dependence on the port).

Quite similar is the "Dutch" functional approach to the segmentation of the economic impact of ports (Bossche van den, 1997), in which are distinguished:

  1. Direct economic effects

    Those effects are related to the "core" of the port. It concerns the actual employment (and gross added value) to be found at the - geographical - centre of the port (related to the basic activities carried out in the port).

  2. Backward linkages

    To perform their core activities, the economic actors that are comprised in the direct effect will use goods and services from subcontractors who need other subcontractors and so on. The total amount of employment connected with those subcontractors ads up the so-called backward linkages. The ratio between backward linkages and direct effects is called the backward multiplier.

  3. Forward linkages

    Without the presence of the port, those activities either would not take place, or would take place against higher operating costs, or would be located elsewhere (maybe outside the national economy). As for the previous port induced industry, it is much more difficult to measure forward linkages in an objective and transparent way (e.g. risk of overestimating for possible doublecounting).

The picture is greatly complicated by what we can call the "historical" employment impact: that is, the employment in industries that are still located in the port area because they used to be "port oriented" in the past.

Moreover all these definitions implicitly identify a fourth set of firms that are not affected at all by the presence of the port. But it is not certain whether the fourth group even exists, as it is arguable whether any sector exists that is not at all affected by the distribution of wealth originating from port activities.

This is why, finally, also preliminary approaches concerning definitions can affect results from different PIS that should never been compared a-critically.

4.3 Choice of the methodology for employment assessment

- Rough guess methods, ad hoc survey methods

It is not rare to find port impact studies not based on rigorous methodology. When the "political" aim (i.e. emphasis on the port benefits) is the real goal for generating communication among main parties involved in the decision processes leading to the allocation of public resources to seaports projects, the issue of methodological approach for a careful assessment fades into the background. Port Authorities quite often justify tailor-made solutions due to the peculiarity of the case study, but they do not provide transparency on calculations. For a critical survey on such "geographical" and ad hoc survey methods for estimating port employment and value added see, for example, Isemar (1997) and Haezendonck et al. (2000).

- Models of port demand

Following a series of empirical studies based on the port of Tampa (USA), DeSalvo and Fuller (1994, 1995) have advanced a methodological proposal which attempts to offer a simple conceptual framework to evaluate a share impact of ports. The impact depends (i) on the cargo volumes transshipped by the port and (ii) - taking into account the changes in local output due to price changes - on the price elasticity of the demand for imports and exports channeled through that port.

They showed that a reduction in both exports and imports (due to an exogenous "shock": a stop or a decreasing in port activities), will cause, besides a loss in direct employment, an increase in transportation costs. This will lead to a final result of higher sale prices of the products and a progressive reduction in the global quantity imported/exported). Moreover also internal production costs, and consequently, the sale price of the domestic products that use imported goods in their production process will boost. This, in turn, will bring down the demand of such products, which, sooner or later, and depending on the market structure, will mean a reduction in employment and output in the analyzed area.

- The economic base approach

The central aspect of the model, which implies that exports have an autonomous behavior, rests on the believe that regional income critically depends on the export sector, where the economic base multiplier is expressive of the changes income would experience in light of autonomous changes in exports.

The adoption of this model, in particular for port-impact analysis (Isemberg, 1957; Kraft, 1966), has been criticized for three main weaknesses:

  1. It considers as a non-basic (or endogenous) sector all activities related to the flows of imports;
  2. The model only provide an aggregate multiplier (a substantial increase in exports of a determined good has exactly the same multiplying effect as an equal increase in exports of a different good);
  3. The model mainly computes the induced effects without offering satisfactory assessment of the indirect effects.

- The Keynesian Income-Expenditure approach

This model, derived from the core of most macroeconomic demand models, has been suggested to calculate the secondary impacts derived from port activity. In the income-expenditure final multiplier the critical element is the marginal propensity to consume goods produced internally.

From the point of view of port economic impact studies, this approach, which has some advantages over the base-export models (it considers that imports substitution can constitute an income-generating factor), has also the disadvantage of only providing one multiplier for the computation of the induced effect, and not offering any information about the technical and/or economic interrelations that exist among different sectors.

- The Input-Output Approach

One of the most fruitful approaches to assess port economic impact is that based on an input-output analysis (Warf-Cox, 1989 and Castro-Millan, 1998). The system of producers and consumers is divided into different branches, which are defined in terms of the resources they require as inputs and what they produce as outputs. The quantities of input and output for a given time period, usually expressed in monetary terms, are entered into an input-output matrix within which one can analyze what happens within and across various sectors of an economy where growth and decline takes place and what effects various subsidies may have. In this way, the impact of the previously defined port-related sectors can be computed with a breakdown level depending on the matrix framework.

There are several reasons supporting the utility of the model. Firstly because this kind of analysis allows obtaining a multiplier for each one of the activity branches considered. Moreover, if also private consumption and households wages and salaries are considered, it permits to compute the whole sectional multipliers (including then direct, indirect and induced effects). On the other hand this method is very expensive (in terms of costs and time) and sometimes national I-O matrixes are used for a long period for regional purpose (with an evident lack in local details).

- Adjusted Location Quotients

Musso-Benacchio-Ferrari (1999) proposed (and applied to Italian ports) a technique for estimating the port's employment local impact assumed as the employment that can be ascribed to the port within the above mentioned direct,indirect and induced impact.

Employment impact is evaluated in terms of shares of employees to be ascribed to the port impact according to the estimated probability that industries are totally or partially port oriented (compensation approach). The technique basically consists of rules for estimating the importance of port in the employment of each industry. It is a mix of four different analytical tools:

  • the "control regions" technique, for the territorial definition of port economies and non-port economies (PE and NPE)
  • the location quotients analysis, for the comparison between port economies and non-port economies
  • the shift share analysis, for the attribution of the share of employees for each selected industry belonging to a port economy
  • calculus of probability, to remove the random and/or biased component from the data.

The many advantages of the proposed approach are in the sense that:

  • it avoids any discretional bias: there is no arbitrary evaluation, neither on definition of "port related" industries, nor in the share of employment attributable to the port;
  • it is relatively easy, from the point of view of time and cost, in that it does not require direct data collection but just census data: in most advanced countries there exists data available on employment, with suitable level of territorial and industrial breakdown.

By the way there are still some points open to improvement:

  • it gives rise to a strong discretion in the choice of homogeneous control regions (which ideally should be homogeneous to the PE except for the existence of the port);
  • the problem of underestimation as a result of compensations has no satisfactory solution, but can only be coped approximately;
  • the proposed technique does not join with input-output methods, neither with the wider Keynesian macro-economic inducement evaluation.

4.4 Some empirical results

In principle, comparing results obtained from different studies, different methodologies and different periods is nor easy neither correct.

A part from methodological issues, it is important to state that PIS are first of all decision supporting tools for regional planning, giving an estimation of ports inputs payback, and not a sort of model for benchmarking ports impacts in different contexts. In fact even if it were possible to compare ports positive effects computed for the same time and unbiased by methodological approaches and discretionary estimations, what would be the "added value" of such a comparison? Port direct and indirect activities have in fact a very close causal link with the historical, geographical and institutional background of the local economy, which are elements not at all (or partially) under the control of the port community. Moreover what could be considered as a higher economic impact in terms of employment or added value might be lower, compared with other ports, in terms of dues, duties and tax flows.

A comparative table of the results from different PIS is therefore here included just to provide some general elements of discussion.

Port
Year
Cargo Tons.
Employment
Comments
Rouen (FR)
1991
23 M.
14,535
Elaboration on census data (geographical criteria)
Dunkerque (FR)
1993
40 M.
20,343
Elaboration on census data (geographical criteria)
Nantes/St. Nazaire (FR)
1995
30 M.
24,265
I-O + weighed estimation
Anvers (BE)
1988
97 M.
63,500
Geographical criteria + direct survey: only direct employment
Anvers (BE)
1995
111 M.
114,440
Geographical criteria + direct survey: 56,770 (direct)
Gand (BE)
1995
21 M.
24,428
Geographical criteria + direct survey
Bruges-Zeebrugge (BE)
1995
30 M.
11,263
Geographical criteria + direct survey
Rotterdam (NL)
1995

1996

284 M.
160,500
Direct survey + I-O analysis: 63.000 (direct) + 35.000 (backward) + 62.500 (forward on the national level)
Genova (IT)
1991
42 M.
35,390
Adjusted Location Quotients
Genova (IT)
1996
47 M.
35,771
Adjusted Location Quotients
Santander (ES)
1993
4,5 M.
28,935
Empirical survey + I-O analysis
London (UK)
1996
53 M.
28,337
Employment in a-priori defined port related activities: sea and coastal water transportation, cargo handling, storage, warehousing, other transportation activities and other transportation agencies.
Southampton (UK)
1996
34 M.
4,832
 
Liverpool (UK)
1996
31 M.
5,161
 
Plymouth (UK)
1989
2 M.
627
Survey + Estimation: direct + Indirect
New York/New Jersey (USA)
1977
61 M
227,100
I-O + survey techniques. Induced effects computed for USA
New York/New Jersey (USA)
1985
53 M.
250,800
I-O + survey techniques. Induced effects computed for USA
Hampton Roads (Virginia, USA)
1984
55 M.
45,732
Direct surveys: 12738 (p-required) + 3399 (p-attracted) + 29595 (p-induced)

Sources: Isemar, NEI, Warf-Cox, Yochum-Agarwal, Musso et al., Castro-Millan, Gripaios-Gripaios, Gripaios.


The wide range of values and approaches suggests some comments.

From a methodological point of view most of the studies, besides using sophisticated techniques, can't avoid a share of subjectivity (interviews, surveys, estimations). Moreover, the input-output matrixes used are "adapted" (regionalized) from national economy I-O matrixes, when a regional one is not available. Beside the fact that it doesn't seem to be a transparent method due to the fact that details of the "regionalising" procedures are not given, moreover this doesn't allow to take into account several local economic features.

Concerning data, it seems to be no apparent relation between the estimated impact and the total volume of ports throughput. A more accurate analysis (as performed by Warf-Cox, 1989) should distinguish between changes in cargo volumes, and changes in the commodity mix. The impact attributable in to changes in the commodity mix arise from the fact that different commodities require different handling methods, and thus different amount of labour, material and service inputs for their loading and unloading. For example a rise in the share of trade accounted for containerized traffic will decrease aggregate direct labour inputs such as stevedoring services, potentially increase indirect effects due to logistic activities performed on high value goods, increase capital investments and expenditures on items such as fuel oil, in turn indirectly altering patterns in the local economy. Within the traffic mix, the role of transshipment is generally not taken into consideration, while the effects of passengers (ferries and cruises) usually seem to be underestimated. Moreover, while all of the studies report global figures of port-related employment, few of these try to analyze the breakdown in different categories (e.g. Warf-Cox, 1989). Nevertheless it is quite evident that the structure of the induced employment (workers, professionals, engineers etc.) is an important indicator of the quality of the impact, of its added value and of the leadership functions of the port region.

Moreover, the fact that containerization and standardization of cargo and related procedures may change the role for ports from industrial/service linkage to a simple transit point, sometimes can also lead to moves of main port related premises of holdings, corporations and administrative departments towards inland locations, while executive branches still remain close to the port. This has to be seen as a high risk for the port local economy to loose important managerial and leadership functions.

Finally, the computed results are, in general, not so relevant. Moreover quite often the growth in tons does not lead to a comparable growth in terms of employment (for instance the throughput of Rotterdam grew on average 1.6% per year during the period 1987-1997, while direct and indirect impacts decreased on average 2.8% per year). In that respect the causal relationship of port and city economy has been reversed. Ports are no longer the economic engines of seaport towns, while the differentiated production and service networks of the region constitute a prerequisite for the economic benefit of the ports in term of a value added and employment oriented service center (i.e. the case of Rotterdam and Antwerp).

All the above considerations implicitly stress the point that PIS are more effective if repeated over time in order to constantly monitoring changes in the economic relationship between the port and the city.


4.5 Main criticisms to PIS and their role in economic and port planning

There are several critics moved versus port impact studies.

The "original" criticism made by Davis (1983) pointed out the lack of a thorough investigation of the degree of dependency on the ports of the various activities included in the impact component. PIS investigators, in fact, not only have to face with the obstacle of searching for firms whose business is related to the port (roughly the first task), but, once identified, they have to establish the degree of a firm's (industry's) dependence on the port (second sub-goal). Unfortunately, due to its nature, the assessment of this degree of dependence runs the risk of a very subjective estimation. When data are lacking to correct assess ports impact, there may be a strong bias, of some of the parties involved in the decision making process, to overestimate mainly indirect effects.

The second criticism of PIS has been on their practical applications in terms of either estimating period to period changes in economic impact or measuring the incremental benefits of additional port investments. Waters (1977) attributed to these lacks the drawback that PIS usually do not provide useful guidance for port planning. Chang (1978) stated that "PIS are static in that these studies measure the economic impact of port operation usually for one year only during which collected data are relevant".

The need of replications over a period of time, in order to use impact studies in a more correct and powerful way, is quite evident. The fact that, despite all the outlined remarks, PIS usually remain una tantum studies, is due on one hand to the high cost of data collection and calculation of this kind of analysis, and, on the other hand, on the short term political aim which is usually associated to PIS (promoting port expansion).

The most significant and relevant criticism made by Randall (1988) on the use of economic impact studies in the forms indicated above, is that the selection of port specific industrial categories does not reflect the true functional profile of the port. He emphasizes the natural "proactive" role of seaports and, on the basis of the current trends in cargo handling (namely capital intensification and space consumption), supports a sound justification for Port Authorities to engage in non-marine economic development (from real estate agency and development to custody of bridges and tunnels, from industrial tourism to co-ordination of community festivals). A part from the wealth effects, these non-marine functions often play an important role both in promoting the port itself and in strengthening the link between the port and the port community.

A further remark is in the sense that PIS usually fail to provide reliable guidelines in determining whether or not port facilities should be expanded (while quite often they are used exactly for this goal). The simulation role of PIS has to be carefully considered. First of all it is important that they provide to assess the likely effects of projects in terms of sustainable employment and/or added value in order to avoid overestimated unrealistic expectations (e.g. construction and maintenance effects have to be reduced by the component which is probably not very different from other projects, while economic trends which are not sustainable over time have to be removed). Secondly they should be used only to estimate a port's short run economic impact, since technology is held constant, while the structure of the port (organization, management, equipment) may change. Furthermore port economic activities are affected by international events and by institutional changes as well.

More reasonably we can summarize that PIS serve as an important tool to the community in understanding the structure of a port as well its immediate economic effects. They can provide insights for a meaningful address in port planning: from a pure supply-led transportation strategy (which sometimes leads to port overcapacity in order to compete in the market), to a more balanced incremental stepwise combination of supply-led and demand-led industrial strategy.

There is a further point that seems to be quite important and often underestimated. PIS are seldom recognized as an aid to the decision making process on the overall economic regional planning. The usual perspective of utilization, in fact, is quite "narrow": politicians and decision-makers usually look at them as the main tool for port (expansion) planning.

If the first general aim of PIS is to provide a detailed analysis of the existing relationships between the port and the regional economy, then we have to agree that their utility is wider than that of a "black box" for simulating port impact under different scenarios.

Their "added value" is to give a better knowledge of the economic framework of a port region and therefore they have to be considered as an important layer in the economic and spatial planning of the whole region. They support economic evidence (the benefits of the port) that have to be compared with costs, and then translated in options for an integrated global economic planning, and in priorities for better decisions on the economic, social and territorial development of the region (as well as other sector studies).

Only if PIS are considered as an important "cognition" estate for the local government, and their key role in port planning is correctly integrated in the overall economic planning, it could be possible to limit some of the frictions between the different players involved (port users, community groups, local business community, different government layers) enhancing cooperation and synergies (Hoyle, 1999).



5. The "local" cost-benefit analysis and the "wider" (national, supranational) context

The port economic impact (direct and indirect) has finally to be compared to the costs suffered by local economies that are getting higher in terms of land consumption, environmental problems and traffic congestion.

Schematically we can outline the main (monetary and non-monetary) costs of the port presence for the local economy as in the following:

  • The local share of investments in maritime and port infrastructures, transport infrastructures;
  • Opportunity costs of port industry inputs: capital, labor, space (coast and landscape);
  • Negative "sunk" externalities: environmental aspects (air, water, acoustic pollution), landscape decay, irrecoverable investments in facilities, traffic congestion, costs for "conciliating" the presence of the port in a urban context, the risk of hazardous material handling (chemicals, petrochemicals);
  • Eventually loss of managerial and leadership functions for local port economies that are quite no longer among the location selection criteria of holdings, corporations and administrative departments of the firms located within the port region.

Verbeke-Debisschop (1996) argue that, even when PIS correctly perform a cost-benefit analysis, they usually don't take into account "external effects and do not allow to introduce shadow prices for the valuation of specific inputs and outputs". Given that the market prices are used for the measurement of all the costs and positive effects (when they are monetary valuable), any distortion of the market from a perspective of economic efficiency will lead to a biased picture of the real effects. Due to the fact that in port production function imperfections usually affect the inputs market (e.g. for the mechanism of land allocation and pricing in ports) the risk of overestimating net port impact is substantial.

The quite evident disequilibrium between a reduced positive economic impact of ports, which tends to move away from a local environment to a much wider and often international one, and the increasing costs and negative externalities, which remain spatially concentrated in the local system, seems to have no straight solution.

A problem of territorial distribution effects in fact occurs, taking into account that:

  • labor usually comes from the local port economy and its payback stops in port region;
  • capital more rarely originates from local systems while it is quite often provided by national and international systems (and consequently its payback doesn't stop in port regions);
  • firms may be local actors, but horizontal concentration (between big stevedoring and logistic companies) and vertical integration (between shipping companies and terminal operators) tend to internationalise firms ownership;
  • port land use is usually regulated by leasing and concessions contracts but quite often land prices are a strategic tool for attracting companies and they don't reflect real value of the space;
  • the use of the fixed social capital of the local system (namely transport infrastructures) is free (free-toll roads and highways) or it pays fees sometimes lower than costs (e.g subsidisation) to economic agents who often operate on a wider territorial scale (rail, motorway operators);
  • taxes and duties are just partly earned and managed by local port systems;
  • port users who benefit from port benefits are more and more spread all over the world, while negative impacts affect mainly port regions.

The outlined impasse seems to have no straight solution: the risk is that of a "refuse tip" effect, such as ports as facilities not desirable for local communities, more and more necessary for other countries economies while more and more economically less significant for their regions (Musso, 1996).

It seems meaningful, therefore, (re)considering the dis-equilibrium between cost and benefits for the local economy within a wider comparison between global cost and benefits, including those for the hinterland. Ports, in fact, still remain very important even from a mere national perspective. They generate tax flows and duties, provide direct positive effects on Gross National Product, Balance of Payments and Balance of Trade. Wider effects are in the sense that ports constitute growth poles for national industries (e.g. manufacturing, transport, logistics) and services, act as macro-economic tools for territorial policies aiming at developing depressed areas, and provide access to international markets and foreign investments.

On the other hand national costs for ports development seem to be sum of the local negative impacts (although not directly equally suffered by all the population), with in addiction:

  • the national share of investments in maritime and port infrastructures, transport infrastructures;
  • organizational and coordinating costs between central government and local port authorities/harbour master offices;
  • human resource costs (e.g. early retirements funds for ex-dockers of pools).

Even if these costs can be considered still compensated (even if with a decreasing margin) by overall benefits, a clearly imbalance on costs and benefits distribution still arises.

Finally according to the perspective of a wider overall economic system port industry plays more and more an irreplaceable role as central links in the logistic chains of the global economy. Port users benefit from the port activities mainly in order to reduce their own production costs and increase demand of their product and services.

Providing a comparative overview of the results of five investment projects in Belgian ports, Blauwens (1993) shows, in the form of the net return per invested Belgian Franc (benefit ratio), that the benefit count is usually lower from a Belgian point of view than from an international one. In recent studies NEI (1996, 1997) has investigated the size of the forward linkages connected to the Rotterdam port activities both on a national and European scale. On the national level the direct effect brings along forwarded linkages for the 70% of the direct value added, and for the 100% of the direct employment. The cross-border relationships between the port and its users in its hinterland are even more evident. In 1997, on a basis of 24 billion Nlg of national added value generated by the port, an additional 24 billion Nlg of gross value added can be found in other countries (mainly in Germany and Norway).

Another important element has to be added to this unbalanced scenario, underlining the lack of control by port communities in the strategic planning of port development. Although port positive effects for regional economies are fading, ports are more and more under pressure due to the current high shipping lines volatility in calling at ports (Meersman et al., 1999) and the already highlighted location indifference of port related firms. This force ports (and port economies) to face potential crisis through a unconditioned supply-driven port planning leading to a structural overcapacity which worsen local conditions. Such a vicious circle may determines potential severe conflicts between local community and decision makers concerning port matters, sharpened also by the perceived lack of representation of local interests by port governance.



6. Facing the disequilibrium: some open points towards a sustainable port development

All the above considerations could be synthesized in the following points:

  • the increasing competitive environment between ports decreases single port's economic rent;
  • growing investments in new port infrastructures and technologies are leading to an ever widening gap between, on one hand, the regional use of the resources of territory, natural potential and tax money and, on the other side, the regional effects on employment an added value;
  • while benefits are generally increasing, their distribution effects are widening (towards a "borderless" economic system) and they are becoming less concentrated in the local port system;
  • the local communities are bearing the weight port industry development, and the risk of an irrecoverable overcapacity;
  • social conflicts related to port development are getting more and more important (Port Authorities, community groups, business community, national and local government).
Within such a scenario could be still realistic (and to what extent) considering ports as catalysts for regional economy growth and development?

The issue has to be carefully addressed. It is, in fact, correct to look at the economic role for ports from a global perspective taking into account at the same time regional and wider contexts. While the former perspective of ports as powerful economic tools for regional growth seems to be outdated, the mere consideration of ports as critical links in the global transport network bypasses the main problem of a correct input payback for the local system. The synthesis can be achieved in recognizing that the issue of port development it is not an unconstrained maximisation model, but, first of all a matter of (spatial and overtime) sustainability of costs and benefits.

From a local point of view the idea of port sustainability implies the improvement of the trade off between costs and benefits (first of all through a more correct payback of ports input), and the possibility that the all the actors belonging to the port community (local community in primis) can play an active role in deciding the "quantum" of the port expansion and the amount of the resources to be allocated.

Several open points can be outlined concerning different factors, about which decision makers (at local, national and European level) should argue in order to co-operate in drawing meaningful policies, and consequently actions, for a fairer distribution of port effects.

Impact assessment - The first and concrete step in such a broad topic should be the effort of adopting common conceptual frameworks and "objective" quantitative methodologies in order to assess the role of ports for economic systems in terms of (i) local impact (direct-indirect employment and territorial impact), (ii) fiscal flows and returns on investments, (iii) international effects of the ports within a global economy.

Land use and pricing - Concerning inputs of port's production function, a suitable market structure in port land use (at the same time efficient for the "supplier", i.e. the local community, and effective for the "purchaser", i.e. direct and indirect users of port services), can be considered one of the main priorities (Musso-Benacchio, 1999). Consistent rental policies have to try to link as much as possible leasing rents directly to the costs of local communities (including opportunity costs of space) not otherwise countervailed by benefits.

Port Infrastructures - New schemes for infrastructure pricing and financing have moreover to be implemented, in order also to correctly apply the user pays principle stated by the major recent policy document of European Commission (European Commission, 1997). Following this perspective an efficient decentralization of port tax systems could be considered as a first step for allowing ports (mainly in the Mediterranean area) to have more control on investment decisions.

Port networking strategies - It is not a futuristic scenario that which foresees breaking through administrative borders of single ports entering into partnership with surrounding nodes and regions (Van den Berg - Van Klink, 1997). This could lead to a more rational planning, selections and locations of port activities. Control of knowledge-intensive activities and co-ordination of partnerships with other nodes could be considered as ports core new business, allowing port regions to held leadership and control of all transportation and logistical flows and related added value activities.

Co-operation in the decision making process - Analysis of interests/conflicts, co-operation and synergies among all the players (directly and indirectly) involved in port planning (from state government to ports users) have to be actively promoted. For this reason Port Authorities have to ideally play as "chairmen" in the roundtables of the decision making process regarding port planning and development. The meaningful involvement of local communities (which sometimes are among the weaker parts of the port stakeholders community) should be considered an important target, in order also to regain a sort of legitimacy of governmental institutions (firstly Port Authorities) in territorial planning, which quite often is questioned. Since critical inputs of port's production function are supplied mainly from local systems (natural resources, labor and infrastructures), is therefore a main point that local communities take part in port decisions (although in the forms of representation).



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Evergreen investiert bis zu fast 1,5 Milliarden Dollar in den Bau von 23 Containerschiffen
Taipeh
Sieben Schiffe mit einer Kapazität von je 5.900 TEU wurden bei Jiangsu New Yangzi Shipbuilding und 16 Schiffe mit einer Kapazität von je 3.100 TEU bei CSSC Huangpu Wenchong Shipbuilding bestellt.
Im Jahr 2025 verzeichneten die spanischen Häfen einen Rekordumschlag von fast 19 Millionen TEU Containern.
Madrid
Neue historische Höchststände auch bei konventionellen Gütern und Passagieren
Erste Containerumschlagoperation in einem algerischen Hafen
Erste Containerumschlagoperation in einem algerischen Hafen
Algier
Es geschah am Sonntag im Hafen von Djen Djen.
Lkw-Fahrer aus Serbien, Bosnien und Herzegowina, Montenegro und Nordmazedonien blockieren die Grenzen.
Belgrad
Einwöchiger Protest gegen das neue Ein-/Ausreisesystem der EU
Wiederaufnahme der Angriffe auf Schiffe in der Region des Roten Meeres droht
Teheran
Sie würden als Reaktion auf eine Eskalation der militärischen Aktionen der USA und ihrer Verbündeten in der Region umgesetzt.
Neuer Jahresrekord für den Schiffsverkehr in der Straße von Malakka und Singapur
Neuer Jahresrekord für den Schiffsverkehr in der Straße von Malakka und Singapur
Port Klang
Im vergangenen Jahr passierten zum ersten Mal über 100.000 Schiffe den Hafen.
Neuer Rekord an Seeleuten, die von ihren Reedern im Stich gelassen wurden
London
Im Jahr 2025 wurden 6.223 Besatzungsmitglieder von 410 Schiffen zurückgelassen.
Zwei FMC-Kommissare fordern die US-Regierung auf, gegen kanadische und mexikanische Häfen vorzugehen.
Washington
Die Durchsetzung der Bestimmung zur Verhinderung der Umgehung der Hafenwartungsgebühr durch Frachtführer wurde dringend gefordert.
Der jährliche Containerumschlag im Hafen von Algeciras bleibt stabil.
Algeciras
Es wurde ein Rückgang des Warengewichts in den Containern um 6,2 % verzeichnet.
Die EU-Kommission ermächtigt Italien, finanzielle Unterstützung für den Eisenbahnbetrieb in Häfen bereitzustellen.
Rom
Anreize in Höhe von maximal 30 Millionen Euro über fünf Jahre
Die Schifffahrtsunternehmen fordern weitere Anreize, um die Wiederherstellung der Durchfahrten durch den Suezkanal zu beschleunigen.
Die Schifffahrtsunternehmen fordern weitere Anreize, um die Wiederherstellung der Durchfahrten durch den Suezkanal zu beschleunigen.
Ismailia
Hervorgehoben wurde auch die Notwendigkeit, die Versicherungsprämien für Schiffe, die die Region des Roten Meeres durchfahren, zu senken.
3,1 Millionen Euro an unbezahlten regionalen Seegrundstücksgebühren in kampanischen Häfen eingetrieben
Neapel
422 Mahnungen an nicht konforme Händler
Im November 2025 ging der Güterverkehr in den Häfen von Genua und Savona-Vado um 5,5 % zurück.
Genua
Die beiden Flughäfen verzeichneten prozentuale Abweichungen von -7,5 % bzw. +0,6 %.
EU-ETS: Interferry fordert einen Stopp der 100-prozentigen Gebühr für Fähremissionen im Jahr 2026.
Victoria
Der Verband prangert an, dass der überwiegende Teil der Einnahmen aus dem maritimen Emissionshandelssystem in die nationalen Haushalte der Mitgliedstaaten umgeleitet wird.
Die neue Konfiguration des Servicenetzes der Ocean Alliance bestätigt sieben Anläufe italienischer Häfen.
Hongkong/Taipeh
Zwei im Hafen von Genua, zwei im Hafen von La Spezia und jeweils ein Halt in den Häfen von Vado Ligure, Triest und Salerno.
Im vergangenen Jahr stieg der Güterverkehr im Hafen von Marseille-Fos um 5 %.
Im vergangenen Jahr stieg der Güterverkehr im Hafen von Marseille-Fos um 5 %.
Marseille
Die Zahl der Kreuzfahrtpassagiere stieg um 7 %.
AD Ports hat die spanische Werft Astilleros Balenciaga übernommen.
Abu Dhabi
Transaktion im Wert von 11,2 Millionen Euro
CMA CGM meldet drei Verbindungen auf der Route um das Kap der Guten Hoffnung
Marseille
Das internationale Szenario – erklärt das französische Unternehmen – sei komplex und unsicher.
Die Terminals von COSCO Shipping Ports verzeichneten im vergangenen Jahr einen Rekord-Containerverkehr.
Hongkong
Wachstum von +6,2 % gegenüber 2024
Im vierten Quartal 2025 wuchs der Güterverkehr im Hafen von Venedig um 13,5 %.
Venedig
Für das Gesamtjahr wurde ein Anstieg von +4,9 % verzeichnet.
Pufferzonen zur Entlastung des Logistiksystems im Nordwesten
Genua
Der Vorschlag stammt von Connect. Palenzona mahnt jedoch, dass das italienische System auf den Straßengüterverkehr angewiesen ist.
Im Jahr 2025 wurden in den russischen Häfen 884,5 Millionen Tonnen Fracht umgeschlagen (-0,4 %).
Im Jahr 2025 wurden in den russischen Häfen 884,5 Millionen Tonnen Fracht umgeschlagen (-0,4 %).
St. Petersburg
Allein im vierten Quartal betrug das Verkehrsaufkommen 231,1 Millionen Tonnen (+6 %).
Der Hafen von Civitavecchia hat einen neuen jährlichen Kreuzfahrtverkehrsrekord aufgestellt.
Civitavecchia
Ein Anstieg der Transitpassagiere um 5,4 %. Die Zahl der ein- und aussteigenden Passagiere blieb stabil.
Ein aus Russland kommendes Schiff wurde im Hafen von Brindisi beschlagnahmt.
Toasts
mutmaßlicher Verstoß gegen die Sanktionen gegen die Russische Föderation
FS Logistix übernimmt den Eisenbahnbetrieb im Bereich 6A des Hafens von Antwerpen.
Antwerpen
Es werden Hybridlokomotiven der neuen Generation eingesetzt.
Griechischer Reederverband fordert die EU auf, Maßnahmen zum Schutz von Schiffen und Besatzungen zu ergreifen.
Piräus
Aufforderung zur Interessenbekundung für die Sanierung und das Management des Kreuzfahrtterminals im Hafen von Gibraltar
Gibraltar
Bewerber müssen bereit sein, die Arbeiten vollständig zu finanzieren.
Im Jahr 2025 nahmen die Piraterieangriffe auf Schiffe um 18 % zu.
Im Jahr 2025 nahmen die Piraterieangriffe auf Schiffe um 18 % zu.
Kuala Lumpur
Im letzten Quartal wurde ein Rückgang der Unfälle um 43 % verzeichnet.
InRail wird das Intermodalterminal Interporto Pordenone für ein Jahr betreiben.
Pordenon
Vorübergehende Lösung im Hinblick auf die Gründung einer öffentlich-privaten Gesellschaft
Die türkische Werft Kuzey Star plant den Bau einer Werft im syrischen Hafen von Tartous.
Damaskus
Es wird mit Investitionen von mindestens 190 Millionen Dollar über einen Zeitraum von fünf Jahren gerechnet.
Im Jahr 2025 ging der Güterverkehr in den ukrainischen Häfen um 15 % zurück.
Kiew
Der Containerverkehr wächst um 66 %
Der Containerverkehr im Hafen von Hongkong ging im vergangenen Jahr um 5,7 % zurück.
Hongkong
Allein im vierten Quartal betrug der Rückgang -8,0 %.
Im Jahr 2025 verzeichneten die Hafenterminals der PSA einen Rekordumschlag an Containern.
Singapur
Neue Höchststände beim Abfertigungsvolumen in Singapur und den ausländischen Terminals des Konzerns
Die Hafenterminals des chinesischen CMPort verzeichneten im vergangenen Jahr einen Rekordumschlag an Containern.
Hongkong
Die Gesamtzahl betrug 151,5 Millionen TEU, ein Anstieg von +4,0 % gegenüber 2024.
COSCO bestellt zwölf neue 18.000-TEU- und sechs 3.000-TEU-Containerschiffe
Hongkong
Jiangnan Shipyard, China Shipbuilding Trading und COSCO Shipping Heavy Industry erhalten Aufträge im Wert von 2,7 Milliarden US-Dollar.
Der Hafen von Triest schloss das Jahr 2025 mit einem Wachstum des Güterverkehrs von 0,7 % ab, was auf den Anstieg der Rohölpreise zurückzuführen ist.
Triest
Der Hafen von Gioia Tauro hat erneut einen neuen Containerumschlagsrekord aufgestellt.
Der Hafen von Gioia Tauro hat erneut einen neuen Containerumschlagsrekord aufgestellt.
Gioia Tauro
Im Jahr 2025 wird der im Vorjahr verzeichnete Höchststand um 14 % steigen.
Der Hafen von Singapur verzeichnet einen neuen Rekord beim Containerumschlag.
Der Hafen von Singapur verzeichnet einen neuen Rekord beim Containerumschlag.
Singapur
Der Hafen bestätigt seine Position als zweitgrößter Containerhafen der Welt.
Das Güterverkehrsaufkommen im Hafen von Koper wird im Jahr 2025 unverändert bleiben.
Koper
Zunahme bei Containern und Schienenfahrzeugen. Rückgang bei anderen Güterarten.
Die taiwanesischen Unternehmen Evergreen, Yang Ming und WHL schließen das Jahr 2025 mit zweistelligen Umsatzrückgängen ab.
Taipei/Keelung
Im Jahr 2025 nahmen die Piratenangriffe auf Schiffe in Asien um 23 % zu.
Singapur
Die Schwere der Unfälle hat abgenommen
Die Demokratische Partei wirft der Regierung vor, Investitionen in Häfen zu blockieren und die Hafenbehörden einer Sonderverwaltung zu unterstellen.
Rom/Genua
Nova Marine Carriers, Bolten und Ership haben die vollständige Kontrolle über VCK Port Logistics übernommen.
Lugano
Amsterdam hat als einziges Land ein überdachtes Terminal entwickelt, das bei allen Wetterbedingungen betrieben werden kann.
Im vierten Quartal 2025 sanken die Einnahmen der Containerschiffflotte von OOCL um 17,2 %.
Hongkong
Die transportierten Mengen stiegen um 0,8 %.
TKMS unterbreitet unverbindliches Angebot zum Kauf der deutschen Marinewerften
TKMS unterbreitet unverbindliches Angebot zum Kauf der deutschen Marinewerften
Kiel
Das in Kiel ansässige Unternehmen baut Marineschiffe und Luxusyachten.
Mehr als zwei Tonnen Kokain im Hafen von Genua beschlagnahmt
Genua
Nach der Markteinführung hätte die Droge kriminellen Organisationen rund 1,5 Milliarden Euro eingebracht.
Seatrade erwirbt strategische Beteiligung an JR Shipping
Harlingen
Das niederländische Unternehmen wird weiterhin als unabhängige und autonome Organisation agieren.
Im Jahr 2025 bestätigte Ningbo-Zhoushan seine Position als weltweit führender Hafen in Bezug auf den gesamten Güterverkehr.
Im Jahr 2025 bestätigte Ningbo-Zhoushan seine Position als weltweit führender Hafen in Bezug auf den gesamten Güterverkehr.
Ningbo
Mehr als 1,4 Milliarden Tonnen Fracht wurden umgeschlagen. Rund 43 Millionen Container wurden transportiert.
Im Jahr 2025 verzeichnete der Hafen von Ravenna einen neuen historischen Rekord beim jährlichen Güterverkehr.
Ravenna
Ein noch nie dagewesenes Frachtaufkommen wurde allein im vierten Quartal abgefertigt.
Die sardische Hafenbehörde nutzt die KI-gestützte Beratung der Financial Times, um zu verstehen, welche Strategien, Projekte und Infrastrukturen umgesetzt werden sollen.
Cagliari
Direkte Prämie in Höhe von schätzungsweise 140.000 Euro
Die Entsorgung von Sedimenten aus den Baggerarbeiten im Hafen von La Spezia am neuen Wellenbrecher in Genua wurde genehmigt.
La Spezia
Die Genehmigung für den Transfer von 282.000 Kubikmetern, der im Laufe des Jahres 2026 erfolgen soll, wurde erteilt.
Im November stieg der Schiffsverkehr im Suezkanal um 16,0 %.
Kairo
In den ersten elf Monaten des Jahres 2025 passierten 11.620 Schiffe den Hafen (-4,8 %).
ABB wird an drei Containerterminals im Hafen von Rotterdam Landstromsysteme errichten.
Rotterdam/Zürich
Sie werden in der Lage sein, bis zu 32 Containerschiffe gleichzeitig aufzuladen.
Der Güterverkehr in den chinesischen Seehäfen stieg im letzten Monat um 5,8 %.
Der Güterverkehr in den chinesischen Seehäfen stieg im letzten Monat um 5,8 %.
Peking
Die Importe ausländischer Güter stiegen um 8,2 %. Die Containerumsätze stiegen um 8,9 %.
Die ungezügelte Erhöhung der Autobahngebühren beweist das Scheitern der Straßengüterverkehrspolitik der Regierung und von Minister Salvini.
Modena
Franchini: Erst die Verbrauchssteuern, jetzt die Mautgebühren; ein doppelter Schlag, der kleine Unternehmen direkt trifft.
Trasportounito macht das Verfassungsgericht und die ART für die Erhöhungen der Autobahngebühren verantwortlich.
Genua/Rom
Casu und Simiani (PD): Aber ist es die Schuld der Richter, wenn Salvini nicht Minister werden kann?
Xtera Topco wird von einem Joint Venture übernommen, das sich zu 80 % im Besitz von Prysmian und zu 20 % im Besitz von Fincantieri befindet.
Mailand/Triest
Die Transaktion umfasst einen Unternehmenswert von 65 Millionen US-Dollar.
China startet Übung zum Test der Unterbrechung der maritimen Verbindungen Taiwans
Peking
Manöver in der Nähe der Haupthafengebiete
Fincantieri und Wsense erzielen Einigung zur Bereitstellung modernster Unterwassersysteme
Triest
Gemeinsame Entwicklung fortschrittlicher drahtloser Technologielösungen geplant
Eine Studie belegt hohe Konzentrationen persistenter organischer Schadstoffe, die durch Schiffsabwrackaktivitäten verursacht werden.
Brüssel
Hafen von Livorno: Ausschreibung für die Entsorgung von Schiffsabfällen beginnt
Livorno
Der erwartete Vertragswert liegt bei über 40 Millionen Euro.
Umsatz und Gewinn von DSV durch Schenker-Übernahme beeinträchtigt
Kopenhagen
Im Jahr 2025 stieg der Umsatz um +48,0 %.
Wärtsilä meldet ein signifikantes Wachstum der Quartals- und Jahresergebnisse im Marinesegment
Helsinki
Die im Jahr 2025 akquirierten Neuaufträge des finnischen Konzerns bleiben stabil.
Das niederländische Unternehmen Portwise wurde von seinem Landsmann Haskoning übernommen.
Rijswijk
Das Unternehmen bietet Lösungen zur Optimierung des Terminalbetriebs durch Automatisierung und Elektrifizierung an.
Der Bau des ersten von sechs Containerschiffen für Italia Marittima hat in China begonnen.
Triest
Die Schiffe, die sowohl mit herkömmlichem Treibstoff als auch mit Methanol betrieben werden können, werden eine Kapazität von 2.400 TEU haben.
In der Straße von Hormuz befahlen bewaffnete Schiffe einem US-Tanker anzuhalten.
Southampton/London
GTS kündigt neue Bahnverbindungen zwischen dem Hafen von Genua und Mittel- und Süditalien an.
Bari
Verbindungen über das Segrate-Terminal in Mailand
Die Anzahl der von Linienreedereien eingesetzten Schiffe mit Dual-Fuel-Antrieb soll sich bis 2025 verdoppeln.
Washington
Aktuell bestehen 74 % des Auftragsbestands aus Einheiten dieses Typs.
Kühne+Nagel erweitert CargoCity South am Flughafen Frankfurt.
Schindellegi
Eine neue Anlage wird Ende 2028 fertiggestellt und in Betrieb genommen.
AD Ports unterzeichnet Vertrag zum Bau und Betrieb eines Mehrzweckterminals im Hafen von Matadi
Abu Dhabi/Kinshasa
Neustart des Tiefwasserhafenbauprojekts Banana
Confitarma: Die Position der italienischen Steuerbehörde birgt die Gefahr, schwerwiegende Folgen für die Beschäftigung italienischer Seeleute zu haben.
Rom
Bucchioni wurde zum Interimspräsidenten des Verbandes der Spediteure des Hafens von La Spezia ernannt.
La Spezia
Die Ausschreibung für die Entwicklung des Schiffbauzentrums im Hafen von Ancona hat begonnen.
Ancona
Der AdSP-Verwaltungsausschuss hat die Ausschreibung genehmigt.
Die vierteljährliche Finanzperformance von ONE verschlechtert sich weiter
Singapur
Das von der Flotte transportierte Containerfrachtvolumen bleibt stabil
Laura DiBellas Nominierung für die FMC-Präsidentschaft wurde unterzeichnet.
Washington
Seine Amtszeit endet am 30. Juni 2028.
Der Hafen von Singapur verzeichnete 2025 Rekordlieferungen von Bunkeröl.
Singapur
Das Joint Venture von PSA und MOL wird ein neues Ro-Ro-Terminal betreiben.
Der Hafen von Taranto wurde von einer Delegation des japanischen Unternehmens FLOWRA besucht.
Taranto
Der Verband vereint 21 der wichtigsten japanischen Energieunternehmen.
Die neuen Aufträge von ABB überstiegen in einem Quartal erstmals 10 Milliarden Dollar.
Zürich
Wachsende Nachfrage in den Bereichen Schifffahrt, Häfen und Eisenbahn
In den Vereinigten Staaten wurde MSC mit einer Geldstrafe von insgesamt 22,67 Millionen Dollar belegt.
Washington
Die Bundesseebehörde hat die Ergebnisse einer Untersuchung veröffentlicht.
CSC Vespucci und Livorno Reefer werden eine gemeinsame Plattform für Obst, Gemüse und exotische Produkte im Hafen von Livorno bilden.
Signal Ocean hat AXSMarine übernommen
Paris/London
Das Unternehmen bietet Webplattformen zur Unterstützung des Schiffschartersektors an.
Stena RoRo hat in China eine Bestellung über zwei Ro-Ro-Schiffe aufgegeben, mit Optionen für vier weitere.
Göteborg
Sie wurden in Zusammenarbeit mit dem italienischen Unternehmen Naos entworfen.
Shanghai Zhonggu Logistics Co. bestellt vier neue 6.000-TEU-Containerschiffe
Shanghai
Die Bestellung beinhaltet Optionen für zwei weitere Schiffe
Die Umsätze von UPS sanken im Jahr 2025 um 2,6 %.
Allein im letzten Quartal wurde ein Rückgang von -3,2 % verzeichnet.
ICS hat seine regelmäßige Analyse der Leistung von Flaggenstaaten veröffentlicht.
London
Michail Stahlhut wird im Mai als CEO von Hupac zurücktreten.
Lärm
Bertschi: Unter seiner Führung wurde die Position des Unternehmens als führender Anbieter kombinierter Straßen-/Schienentransporte in Europa gestärkt.
Die Mitglieder des Ravenna Marine Resource Partnership Body wurden ernannt.
Ravenna
Es tritt am 4. Februar zu seiner ersten Sitzung zusammen und bleibt vier Jahre im Amt.
Messina (Assarmatori): Die Verordnung des MIT zum Kaltbügeln ist eine gute Sache.
Rom
Dies sei ein grundlegender Schritt, betonte er, um sicherzustellen, dass die Elektrifizierung der Bahnsteige auch tatsächlich nutzbar sei.
Contship ist dem DCSA+-Programm der Digital Container Shipping Association beigetreten.
Melzo
Zu den Zielen gehören die Verbesserung der Effizienz des Terminalbetriebs, die Genauigkeit der Planung und die Zusammenarbeit mit Reedereien.
Der argentinische Hafenarbeiterverband droht mit einem Streik in den nationalen Häfen.
Das Silber
Aktion zur Unterstützung der Arbeiter im Hafen von Concepción del Uruguay
Im Jahr 2025 wuchs der Güterverkehr im Hafen von Taranto um 0,8 %.
Taranto
Allein im letzten Quartal wurde ein Rückgang von -22,6 % verzeichnet.
Im vergangenen Jahr wuchs der Containerverkehr im Hafen von Valencia um 3,4 %.
Valencia
5.662.661 TEU wurden abgefertigt
Fincantieri erhält Auftrag der italienischen Marine zur Verbesserung der Cybersicherheit von Marineschiffen
Neue Anlage in Charleston für die Produktion und Prüfung von Schiffsantriebssystemen
Arlington
Es wurde von Leonardo DRS, einer Tochtergesellschaft des italienischen Unternehmens Leonardo, eingeweiht.
Projekt zur Stärkung der Cybersicherheit in der Schifffahrt und in Häfen
Brest/Brüssel/Rom
Die Partner sind France Cyber Maritime, FEPORT und die Fédération des Sea
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Der Containerumschlag im Hafen von Los Angeles ging im letzten Quartal 2025 um 10,6 % zurück.
Los Angeles
Für das Gesamtjahr wurde ein Rückgang von -0,6 % verzeichnet.
In den ersten sechs Monaten des Betriebs produzierte InnoWay Triest 170 Eisenbahnwaggons.
Triest
In Bagnoli della Rosandra ist der Bau von 600 Wohneinheiten im Jahr 2026 geplant.
Die Ferretti Group lehnt das teilweise und bedingte Übernahmeangebot von KKCG Maritime ab.
Mailand
Das starke Vertrauen in die langfristige Strategie des Unternehmens wurde bekräftigt.
Der Hafen von Haropa verzeichnet einen neuen Rekord im Containerumschlag
Le Havre
Im vergangenen Jahr stieg der gesamte Güterverkehr um 2 %.
Decio Lucano, der Doyen der Schifffahrtsjournalisten, ist verstorben.
Genua
Seine Veröffentlichungen in gedruckter Form sind unzählig, darunter "Vita e Mare" und "TMM", aber auch digital mit "DL News".
Marsa Maroc bestellt 106 elektrische Terminalzugmaschinen bei Terberg
Benschop
Sie werden im Hafen von Nador West Med beschäftigt sein.
Contargo erwirbt 50 % der Cargo-Center-Graz Logistik
Mannheim
Das deutsche Unternehmen erweitert sein intermodales Netzwerk auf die Adriahäfen Koper und Rijeka.
Ein verbindliches Angebot aus Dubai für den Kauf des Ro-Ports Venedig Mos
Venedig
Das Unternehmen betreibt das Terminal für die Fährverbindungen und Kreuzfahrten in Fusina.
Der Hafen von Long Beach verzeichnete im Jahr 2025 einen Rekordumschlag an Containern.
Long Beach
Im letzten Quartal wurde ein Rückgang von -8,8 % verzeichnet.
HMM wird KI-basierte autonome Navigationslösungen auf 40 Schiffen einführen
Seoul
Vertrag mit Avikus und Vereinbarung mit KSOE
Zwei neue Bahnverbindungen nach Deutschland vom Interport Padua
Padua
Sie werden von InRail und LTE Italia betrieben.
Intersea ist zum Generalagenten der portugiesischen GS Lines in Italien geworden.
Genua
Die Reederei gehört zur Grupo Sousa.
MSC und das katarische Unternehmen Maha werden den libyschen Hafen von Misurata entwickeln und betreiben.
Paris/Misurata
Es wird mit einer Investition von 1,5 Milliarden Dollar gerechnet.
F2i hat die Konzession für den Touristenhafen Lavagna erhalten.
Mailand
Der Konzessionsvertrag hat eine Laufzeit von 50 Jahren.
Eni lässt den Rumpf der Coral North FLNG vom Stapel laufen.
Geoje/San Donato Milanese
Es wird vor der Küste von Cabo Delgado, nördlich von Mosambik, eingesetzt.
Laghezza hat ein Logistiklager in Sarzana erworben.
La Spezia
Ziel ist es, ein lokales Zentrum für lokale Produktionsaktivitäten zu etablieren.
Das Containerterminal am Roten Meer im ägyptischen Hafen Sokhna wurde eingeweiht.
Sokhna
Es wird von einem Joint Venture von Hutchison Ports, COSCO und CMA Terminals betrieben.
Die Fähre GNV Altair ist nun Teil der GNV-Flotte.
Genua
Es bietet Platz für 2.700 Fahrgäste und verfügt über 915 laufende Meter Rollmaterial.
Maersk bestätigt die Wiederaufnahme der MECL-Transits durch den Suezkanal
Kopenhagen
Die Linie verbindet Indien und den Nahen Osten mit der Ostküste der USA.
Ignazio Messina & C. hat die vollständige Kontrolle über Thermocar übernommen.
Genua
Das Genueser Unternehmen ist im Bereich der temperaturgeführten Kühlcontainerlogistik tätig.
Der Verwaltungsrat von Genco hat den Übernahmevorschlag von Diana Shipping abgelehnt.
New York/Athen
Das amerikanische Unternehmen lässt jedoch einen Hoffnungsschimmer offen, indem es die Gültigkeit der Fusion bestätigt.
MSC wird den Hafen von Triest in den Dragon-Service Italien-USA einbeziehen.
Genf
Der Hafen von Julian wird ab der zweiten Februarhälfte erreichbar sein.
Die De Wave Group hat das französische Unternehmen DL Services übernommen.
Genua
Das Unternehmen ist spezialisiert auf die Planung von Industrieküchen und die Lieferung von technischen Komponenten und Ersatzteilen an Bord.
Der transatlantische TUX-Dienst von CMA CGM wird den Hafen von Salerno anlaufen.
Marseille
Die Linie verbindet die Türkei mit der Ostküste der USA.
Neue intermodale Verbindungen zwischen Norditalien und Belgien durch GTS Rail und CargoBeamer
Bari/Leipzig
Aktiviert auf den Linien Padua-Zeebrugge und Lüttich-Domodossola
Der Kreuzfahrtverkehr im Hafen von Piräus stieg im vergangenen Jahr um 9 %.
Piräus
Rund 1,85 Millionen Passagiere wurden befördert.
Im Jahr 2025 wuchs der Kreuzfahrtverkehr im Hafen von Genua um 6,5 %.
Genua
Fährpassagiere um 3,6 % gesunken
Grimaldi nahm den PCTC Grande Manila in Empfang.
Neapel
Das Schiff hat eine Gesamtkapazität von 9.241 CEUs.
Das Expeditionskreuzfahrtschiff Exploris One wird versteigert
Nantes
Es bietet Platz für 144 Passagiere und 102 Besatzungsmitglieder.
SeaCube Container Leasing hat Martin Container übernommen.
Montvale
Das Unternehmen ist auf das Segment der Kühlcontainer spezialisiert.
Pisano: Die vereinfachte Logistikzone ist von großer strategischer Bedeutung für den Hafen von La Spezia.
La Spezia
RINA und HPC starten Projekt zur Förderung umweltfreundlicher Häfen in der Kaspischen Region
Genua
Fünfjahresvertrag mit der OSZE
Vard baut vier Mehrzweck-Roboterschiffe für Ocean Infinity
Triest
Der Vertrag hat einen Gesamtwert von über 200 Millionen Euro.
Hanseatic Global Terminals wird alleiniger Eigentümer des Florida International Terminals
Rotterdam
Am 19. Januar findet in Genua eine Konferenz zum Thema Engpässe im Logistiksystem Nordwest statt.
Genua
Sie wird in der Transparenzhalle der Region Ligurien stattfinden.
Der Transportsektor steht mit der Einführung künstlicher Intelligenz an einem Wendepunkt.
Ulm
Die meisten Unternehmen befinden sich jedoch noch in einem frühen Stadium dieses Prozesses.
Die Arbeiten zur Verbreiterung des Zufahrtskanals zum Hafen von Livorno sind abgeschlossen.
Livorno
Die Breite zwischen den beiden Ufern wird von 70 auf 120 Meter vergrößert.
Nexans stellt einen Rekord für die Verlegetiefe eines Hochspannungs-Unterseekabels auf der Tyrrhenischen Brücke auf.
Paris
Installation bei -2.150 Metern
Mittel für spanische Häfen zur Anpassung an die Nutzung von Windenergie und anderen erneuerbaren Meeresenergiequellen
Madrid
Programm mit einem Gesamtwert von 212 Millionen Euro
CMD – Costruzoni Motori Diesel kehrt in vollständig italienischen Besitz zurück
Atella
Giorgio und Mariano Negri haben 67 % des Kapitals der chinesischen Loncin Motor Co. erworben.
Intesa Sanpaolo finanziert den Bau von drei PCTCs für Grimaldi Euromed.
Mailand
Die neuen Schiffe werden im Laufe dieses Jahres ausgeliefert.
Medlog übernimmt die australischen intermodalen Aktivitäten von Seaway
Fremantle
Die Transaktion wird im ersten Quartal dieses Jahres abgeschlossen sein.
Das MIT hat die Cybersicherheitsmaßnahmen für nationale Schiffe, Häfen und Hafenanlagen aktualisiert.
Rom
Es wurde ein Rundschreiben veröffentlicht, das unter anderem die Mitarbeiterschulung vorstellt.
V.Group hat das dänische Unternehmen Njord gekauft.
London
Das Unternehmen bietet der Schifffahrtsindustrie Lösungen für Energieeffizienz und Dekarbonisierung an.
HÄFEN
Italienische Häfen:
Ancona Genua Ravenna
Augusta Gioia Tauro Salerno
Bari La Spezia Savona
Brindisi Livorno Taranto
Cagliari Neapel Trapani
Carrara Palermo Triest
Civitavecchia Piombino Venedig
Italienische Logistik-zentren: Liste Häfen der Welt: Landkarte
DATEN-BANK
ReedereienWerften
SpediteureSchiffs-ausrüster
agenturenGüterkraft-verkehrs-unternehmer
MEETINGS
Am 19. Januar findet in Genua eine Konferenz zum Thema Engpässe im Logistiksystem Nordwest statt.
Genua
Sie wird in der Transparenzhalle der Region Ligurien stattfinden.
Die Konferenz von Spediporto mit dem Titel "Chancen in Zeiten von Handelsspannungen nutzen" findet am 1. und 2. Dezember in Genua statt.
Genua
Es wird im Konferenzsaal der Banca Bper stattfinden.
››› Archiv
NACHRICHTENÜBERBLICK INHALTSVERZEICHNIS
Auction of megaterminal in Santos may be postponed due to deadlock within the Federal Government
(A Tribuna)
East Port Said Port faces a new challenge with Europe's carbon rules for shipping
(EnterpriseAM)
››› Nachrichtenüberblick Archiv
FORUM über Shipping
und Logistik
Intervento del presidente Tomaso Cognolato
Roma, 19 giugno 2025
››› Archiv
Feuer an Bord der Fähre Majestic im Hafen von Genua
Genua
Die Flammen wurden durch das Eingreifen der Bordfeuerwehr gelöscht und verursachten keine Verletzungen.
COSCO übernimmt die Kontrolle über das deutsche Logistikunternehmen Zippel
Hamburg
Vereinbarung zur Übernahme von 80 % des Kapitals
Der Hafen von Colombo verzeichnet einen neuen jährlichen Rekord im Containerumschlag.
Kolumbus
Die Hafenbehörde von Sri Lanka unterzeichnet ein Abkommen mit der französischen Schifffahrtsgruppe CMA CGM.
Viasat wird aus dem Kapital des britischen Unternehmens Navarino aussteigen
London
ICG wird die Brüder Tsikopoulos bei der Reinvestition in das Unternehmen unterstützen.
Die Regierung von Palau gewährleistet den uneingeschränkten Betrieb des Schiffsregisters.
Koror
Moses (BMT): Die Dienstleistungen werden weiterhin gemäß internationalen Verfahren und Standards erbracht.
In den ersten neun Monaten des Jahres 2025 stieg der Gütertransport im österreichischen Schienennetz um 1,4 %.
Wien
Allein im dritten Quartal wurde ein Wachstum von +4,9 % verzeichnet.
Saipem erhält 425 Millionen Dollar schweren Offshore-Auftrag zur Erschließung des Sakarya-Gasfelds.
Der Erlass zur Verteilung der PNRR-Mittel an die Interporthäfen wurde unterzeichnet.
Rom
Die Auszahlung von 1,9 Millionen Euro wird erwartet.
Messina, ein genuesisches Unternehmen, startet einen neuen Service nach Algerien.
Genua
Die Rotation umfasst die Häfen von Fos, Genua, Barcelona, Algier und Fos.
FS Logistix ist das erste Unternehmen in Europa, das seinen CO2-Fußabdruck für den Gütertransport zertifizieren lässt.
Rom
Das Unternehmen der FS-Gruppe hat die ISO 14067-Zertifizierung erhalten.
WASS (Fincantieri-Gruppe) gewinnt Torpedoliefervertrag für die indische Marine
Triest
Vertrag mit einem Gesamtwert von über 200 Millionen Euro
FHP Intermodal wird am 1. Januar den Betrieb aufnehmen.
Mailand
Die FHP-Gruppe schließt den Integrationsprozess zwischen ihren Tochtergesellschaften CFI Intermodal und Lotras ab.
Das Kreuzfahrtschiff Coral Adventurer ist in Papua-Neuguinea auf Grund gelaufen.
Port Moresby
Es entstand keine Gefahr für die Personen an Bord.
d'Amico International Shipping bestellt zwei neue MR1-Produktentanker bei Guangzhou Shipyard International.
Hafen von Gioia Tauro: Senkung der Ankergebühr erneut genehmigt
Gioia Tauro
Insgesamt wurden 1,5 Millionen Euro bereitgestellt.
Der Staatsrat hat die Rechtmäßigkeit der Ausschreibung für den neuen Ravano-Pier in La Spezia bestätigt.
Rom/La Spezia
Die Entscheidung der TAR für Ligurien wurde bestätigt.
Hupac wird einen neuen Shuttle-Zugverkehr zwischen Duisburg und Novara einrichten.
Lärm
Planen Sie sechs Rotationen pro Woche ein.
Die Fähranlegestellen für Piombino und die Insel Elba im Jahr 2026 wurden vergeben.
Livorno
Projektfinanzierungsprozess für die erste Wasserstoffproduktionsanlage im Hafen von La Spezia
La Spezia
Projekt zur Bereitstellung von "mobilen" Versorgungsgütern für Fahrzeuge wie Lokomotiven und Boote
Das neue Tragflügelbootterminal im Hafen von Messina wird nach einem Opfer eines Femizids benannt.
Messina
Die Initiative zum Gedenken an Omayma Benghaloum
Drei neue e-RTG-Hofkräne sind am PSA Venice-Vecon-Terminal eingetroffen.
Venedig
Investition von 8,5 Millionen Euro
Fincantieri liefert zweites Mehrzweckkampfschiff an die indonesische Marine
Triest
Zeremonie auf der Muggiano-Werft
Die Verlängerung der Arbeitsverträge für die Manager von Transport- und Logistikunternehmen wurde unterzeichnet.
Rom
Heute von Manageritalia und Confetra unterzeichnet
Im Juni wird sich die Grendi-Gruppe mit einem fünften Ro-Ro-Schiff ausstatten.
Genua
Es wird eine Tragfähigkeit von 3.000 laufenden Metern haben.
Brüssel hat den Kredit zur Rettung des Schienengüterverkehrsunternehmens Lineas genehmigt.
Brüssel
61 Millionen Euro, gewährt von der belgischen Regierung
Green Mobility Partners und KKR schließen sich zusammen, um eine europäische Plattform für Schienenleasing zu schaffen.
Frankfurt
Amerikanisches Unternehmen investiert in GMP
Saipem erhält Offshore-EPCI-Vertrag in Katar
Mailand
Der Vertrag hat einen Wert von rund 3,1 Milliarden Dollar.
Wärtsilä verkauft seine Sparte Gas Solutions an die deutsche Private-Equity-Gesellschaft Mutares.
Helsinki/München
Die Bank of China finanziert den Kauf von Grimaldi Euromeds Grande Melbourne
Betrag von 57 Millionen Euro
GeneSYS Informatica (Fratelli Cosulich) hat 51 % des Kapitals von Navimeteo erworben.
KSOE erhält Auftrag über 466 Millionen Dollar für vier Containerschiffe
Lysaker/Seongnam
NYK und Ocean Yield vergeben Auftrag für vier neue LNG-Tanker
Der Adria-Service 1 von ONE wird auch im Hafen von Ancona Halt machen.
Singapur
Die Bahnlinie nach Damietta verkehrt wöchentlich.
Die Konsolidierungsarbeiten am Riva-Kai im Hafen von Ortona sind abgeschlossen.
Ancona
Dreizehn Millionen sind die Kosten für die Anpassung der Infrastruktur.
Vard hat ein Kooperationsabkommen mit dem norwegischen Forschungsinstitut Norce unterzeichnet.
Ålesund
Es betrifft alle Forschungs- und Innovationsbereiche im Marinesektor.
- Via Raffaele Paolucci 17r/19r - 16129 Genua - ITALIEN
tel.: +39.010.2462122, fax: +39.010.2516768, e-mail
Umsatzsteuernummer: 03532950106
Registrazione Stampa 33/96 Tribunale di Genova
Verantwortlicher Direktor: Bruno Bellio
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