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1 juillet 2025 - Année XXIX
Journal indépendant d'économie et de politique des transports
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FORUM des opérateurs maritimes
et de la logistique

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES

Brussels, 13 February 2001



COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL

Reinforcing Quality Service in Sea Ports: A Key for European Transport



INTRODUCTION

The Commission's Green Paper on Seaports and Maritime Infrastructure sparked a lively and knowledgeable debate with stakeholders and European institutions.

This was not surprising. The Green paper was the first attempt by the Commission to move towards a coherent policy on ports and maritime infrastructure and could, for this reason alone, expect a wide audience. In addition, the perception was fast gaining ground that seaports played a key role in the operation of intermodal door-to-door transport chains, that their functioning was essential for both intra- and extra-Community trade and that, with the apparently inexorable growth of transport demand, maritime transport and hence seaports would have to be called upon to shoulder increasingly more of the burden placed on transport infrastructure.

The soon to be published White Paper on the Common Transport Policy will focus, inter alia, on the increasing role seaports will have to play in order to alleviate current land transport constraints and to ensure a better functioning of the Community's transport market.

Whilst it is understandable that stakeholders would place particular emphasis on areas of direct concern to them, the key issues emerging from the debate can be categorised as follows:

  • The inclusion of seaports in Trans-European Transport Network;
  • The systematic approach to regulate access to the market of port services; and
  • Public financing of seaports and ports infrastructures.



1. SEAPORTS AND TEN-T

Decision No. 1692/96/EC on Community guidelines for the development of the Trans-European transport Network (TEN) provides a broad framework for the establishment of an integrated, multimodal infrastructure network. Seaports obviously play an important role in such a network.

Although the TEN Decision set out the conditions for the categories of port and port-related projects of common interest, the specific aims of projects as well as the specific conditions to be met, agreement could not be reached on an identification, and inclusion in the TEN outline plans (maps), of the seaports in question, essentially because volume and/or type of traffic criteria could not be agreed.

In line with a previously made commitment the Commission re-assessed the situation. It was concluded that the position of seaports (and that of inland ports and intermodal terminals) needed to be specified more clearly in the guidelines in order to help achieve the multimodal objectives of the TEN.

In fact, since the TEN is intended as a multimodal infrastructure network, which should progressively combine and integrate the different transport modes and national networks, a continued exclusion of seaports would not be justified.

As a result, the Commission proposed the identification of, inter alia, some 300 seaports, using objective criteria, for inclusion in the outline plans and sought to improve the definition of relevant projects of common interest relating to seaports. Reactions to the Green Paper were unanimous in requesting that seaports be given their appropriate place in the TEN.

The Commission's proposal has not yet been adopted by Parliament and Council. At the moment an agreement is being sought by the institutions and a satisfactory solution appears close. The Commission has proved its willingness actively to work towards a solution and can be counted on continuing to do so.


2. ACCESS TO THE MARKET OF PORT SERVICES

'Port services' are services of a commercial nature that are provided, for payment, to port users, and this payment is not normally included in the charges collected for being allowed to call at or operate in a port.

It is self-evident that the quality, efficiency and price-performance ratio of port services are essential for the overall quality of service provided by the port. These factors have become key elements in the competition at play between Community ports in order to attract customers.

Historically port services have been provided within frameworks characterised by exclusive rights and/or legal or de facto monopolies of a public or a private nature. Discussions following the publication of the Green Paper have shown that the conventional structures are being eroded and that considerable developments are taking place in all Member States.

In the area of cargo handling the traditional structures have often been successfully challenged, with the result that restrictions have been gradually removed from many markets which have become more commercially oriented with increasing participation of the private sector and, as is generally recognised, increased efficiency accompanied by more market-oriented pricing.

This general development is welcome. It is, however, far from uniform in all Community ports. In addition, it has been pointed out on many occasions that it must be accompanied by clear and reliable procedural rules setting out the rights and obligations of current and potential service providers, as well as those of the competent national authorities involved in overseeing the ports and/or the selection of service providers.

Other port services have not experienced the same level of development; restrictions and private and public monopolies are still prevalent in particular in port pilotage and, albeit to a lesser extent, in towing and mooring. Ports are conscious of the fact that one of the consequences of this situation has been that the supply of these services often represents a disproportionate cost factor to port users and that this, in turn, has become an important element in competition between ports.

Despite the varying levels of market openness in Member States, and even between different ports within the same Member State, all Member States have opted for the principle of gradually opening up this sector to competition.

Nobody is contesting that all port services of a commercial nature are governed by the competition rules of the Treaty as well as the rules on the major freedoms: the freedom of establishment, the free movement of workers, of goods and services.

However, a number of port-specific facts cannot be ignored. Ports may only be able to offer limited space; they have a well-defined role to play in the Community's customs procedures. Ports bear specific responsibility for maritime as well as on-shore safety and environmental protection. These considerations may constitute legitimate grounds for restrictions in the access to the market for the provision of certain port services. However, no restrictions can be unconditionally justified. Furthermore, the diversity of the Community ports requires a differentiated approach. Since no two ports are identical, it has rightly been pointed out that a number of decisions with regard to the level of market access in port services will be influenced by the individual characteristics of the port in question.

The Commission has so far addressed problems in the application of the Treaty rules on a case-by-case basis and will continue to exercise this obligation. Consultations have, however, shown widespread support for the establishment of a regulatory framework at Community level aiming at more systematic rules on access to the port services market in ports with international traffic, while taking into due consideration the maritime safety and environmental requirements and, where appropriate, public service obligations as well as recognising the diversity of the ports in question. This framework should accompany and guide national measures which continue to further eliminate existing restrictions in the port services market whilst ensuring, on grounds of subsidiarity, that this process adequately respects local, regional and national port specificities.

Support for such an approach is not unanimous. The view was expressed that access restrictions to the cargo handling market have been largely eliminated and that therefore no new regulatory framework was necessary. However, this assessment does not reflect the situation in the Community as a whole and, in any case, does not take into account the widely felt inadequacy of procedural rules in connection with the award of authorisations. The port pilots and, considerably less strongly so, towage operators oppose a regulatory framework; they wish to maintain the current structures on the grounds that it has in the past served well to ensure high safety standards . The boatmen, responsible for mooring services, maintain a neutral position. Whereas the pilots' and towage operators' contribution to port safety is appreciated, this in itself is not sufficient ground to exempt these services a priori from the application of the Treaty rules or a new regulatory framework at Community level, although this framework will have to ensure that due account be taken of safety and specific local considerations.

The challenge, therefore, is to combine maritime safety and environmental imperatives and, where necessary, public service obligations with a regulatory structure compatible with competitive patterns. On the basis of extensive consultations, the Commission proposes the enclosed (annex 1) legislative framework on access to the port services market.

In view of the complexity of Member States' port regimes and of the diversity of ports with regards to size, status and function and maritime safety and environmental protection requirements, a Directive is considered the most appropriate legal instrument leaving the implementation of the framework at the level of the Member States.


3. PUBLIC FINANCES AND SEAPORTS

The ownership, organisation and administration of ports vary between and within Member States, thus leading to great diversity in the port sector. While accepting that it should be left to the Member States to decide upon the ownership and organisation, a key issue from a competition point of view is the financial flows between the public authorities, the port operators and the users of the port facilities and services.

Whilst in the past, ports and ports facilities were expected to be paid for by the taxpayer, a discernible trend has developed towards greater private participation in their financing. As a result, financing of many port facilities is increasingly becoming the responsibility of the private sector, while the port authorities tend to restrict themselves more and more to their "landlord" role and the financing and operation of those facilities which are essential to the safe and efficient operation of the port as a whole.

At the same time, more and more ports are seeking to develop a more active commercial role, in cooperation with private partners inside and outside the port. Indeed, some ports are operating entirely on a commercial basis.

3.1. The Report on Public Financing and Charging Practices in the Community Sea Port Sectors ("Inventory")

Under these circumstances, it is not surprising that the competition between the ports, intensified by the completion of the internal market, is influenced by the implementation of Member States' port policies, varied as they are. This may or may not require initiatives at Community level. However, before the debate could be moved forward, it was felt, by all institutions alike, that a satisfactory level of information be established with regard to such key issues as the organisational and managerial structures in Community ports, the financial flows from the public sector to the various types of ports as well as charging practices in these ports.

The Commission therefore gathered, with the help and active involvement of Member States, information in the form of an inventory on public financing and charging practices in Community ports. The Commission committed itself to publish the findings; the inventory is found in annex 2.

Although Member States' information was on the basis of previous facts and data and considerable developments have since taken place, it is nevertheless considered that the information remains in substance valid and should be seen as a useful basis for further work.

The inventory is self-explanatory, its details need not be repeated here. Nevertheless it is appropriate to focus on some key conclusions.

  • Despite the growing role of private involvement in port developments, 90% of the Community's maritime trade is estimated to be handled in ports where investments and other policy and managerial decisions, e.g. charging, are, to varying extents, dependent or, at least, influenced by public bodies.
  • Public investments in port projects represent between 5 and 10% of all Community transport infrastructure investments. Throughout the Community the main emphasis of these investments varies: the Baltic region shows important funding in start-up investments, whilst the North Sea and Mediterranean regions register strong investments in modernisation schemes.
  • The transparency of public financial flows is unsatisfactory: the accounting tools cannot normally deliver aggregate information on public investments going into a port, nor can they retrace satisfactorily flows and use of public monies within ports which are, at the same time, engaged in public infrastructure management and commercial activities.
  • Charging and cost recovery systems vary considerably; cost recovery is not always the main objective.
  • The port services sector is developing and access possibilities to the market are clearly increasing. However, procedural rules which should ensure fair and open selection procedures where the number of service providers is limited are unclear and unsatisfactory.

3.2. Transparency

The inventory has confirmed the view previously expressed by the Commission and others that the current levels of transparency in the ports sector are inadequate to ensure information on aggregated public money flows going into the ports, where this is happening under national schemes, and to retrace flows and use of public monies within port entities, which are, at the same time, engaged in both port management, including port infrastructure management, and commercial activities within ports.

Readily available information on public money flows, from whatever source, would help the Commission in dealing with state aid cases. Under the Treaty rules, Member States are obliged to notify to the Commission any aid they grant and, where, for whatever reason, a state aid case has to be investigated, the Commission normally requests information on public money flows which, under national budget rules, should be readily available.

The principle of neutrality of Article 295 of the Treaty ensures that the Treaty in no way prejudices the rules in Member States governing the system of property ownership. Competition between private and public operators, however, must not be distorted by financial flows from public authorities which would allow the public operator to reduce its own costs. Currently, due to the complexity of the institutional and financial regimes for ports, port management and maritime infrastructure in the Community, the financial relationships between the public sector, the ports and other undertakings working within them are often not clear.

Work on the inventory has shown that at least three major accounting systems are being applied in ports.

First, port management may use an accounting system generally comparable to those used in the private sector and relying on generally accepted accounting principles of the respective Member State and audits through independent bodies. This system is being increasingly used, although its prime purpose is not to show up, as a general rule, the influx, or not, of public monies but rather as an operating tool for the port management and as a benchmarking instrument for its shareholders.

The second system can be described as the public accounting or 'budget' approach. It is intended to record the use of public monies.

The third type of accounting system is employed in certain ports which are part of a wider public body (e.g. at municipal level) and, as a consequence, do not maintain separate accounts. Expenditures such as investments are executed under the authority of the public body and are recorded as an integral part of the public accounting system of the municipality. This approach, termed as 'bundled' accounts, is designed to monitor and control the financial affairs of the wider public body as a whole.

When analysing these three key accounting models, it is clear that none is in a position, by its very nature, to provide transparent and clear information on the public money flows into ports and the use made of them by the port management in the accomplishment of its many tasks. This is not surprising because the systems used were simply not devised to record the information now required and to distinguish between commercial activities and public port and infrastructure management. Indeed, the public budget accounting system practised by certain municipal ports with its inherent principle of universality, i.e. the non-dedication of expenses and income, precludes a clear identification of money flows for specific activities.

The consultations following the publication of the Green Paper have pointed to this unsatisfactory situation. It gives rise to suspicion and recrimination between ports, be it justified or not. It does not allow satisfactory control, where warranted, of state aid rules by the Commission and generally risks to impede competition at a time when Member States and port authorities introduce more and more private initiative, competition and capital into ports.

The Commission believes that application of "Commission Directive 2000/52/EC on the transparency of financial relations between Member States and public undertakings as well as on financial transparency within certain undertakings" (the "Transparency Directive") combined with a legal requirement to keep separate accounts to be introduced as part of the proposed "Directive on market access to port services" will lead to considerable improvements.

3.2.1. Transparency Directive.

The Transparency Directive [article 1(1)] acknowledges that public undertakings continue to play an important role in the economies of the Member States, but requires that the financial relations between public authorities and public undertakings are transparent so as to help ensure fair competition between public undertakings and between public and private undertakings and an effective application of the Treaty's competition rules. The appropriate level of transparency should be achieved if the following emerge clearly:

  • public funds made available directly by public authorities to the public undertakings concerned;
  • public funds made available by public authorities through the intermediary of public undertakings or financial institutions;
  • the use to which these public funds are actually put.

and shall apply in particular to the following aspects of financial relations between public authorities and public undertakings:

(a) the setting-off of operating losses;

(b) the provision of capital;

(c) non-refundable grants, or loans on privileged terms;

(d) the granting of financial advantages by foregoing profits or the recovery of sums due;

(e) the foregoing of a normal return on public funds used;

(f) compensation for financial burdens imposed by the public authorities.

These rules apply to publicly owned ports. The legal structure of the port is irrelevant. Indeed, a public port does not even have to have a legal personality distinct from that of the state because otherwise Member States could decide whether or not a port is covered by the Transparency Directive by choosing a specific legal status or by not granting a port a legal status at all. It is observed in this regard that the fact that a body carrying out economic activities of an industrial or commercial nature is integrated into the state administration and does not have legal personality separate therefrom does not prevent the existence of financial relations between the state and that body. Through the mechanism of budgetary appropriations, the state has by definition the power to influence the economic management of the undertaking, permitting it to grant compensation for operating losses and to make new funds available to the undertaking. It may therefore permit that undertaking to carry out its activities independently of the rules of normal commercial management, which is precisely the situation which the Directive seeks to make transparent.

The Transparency Directive furthermore acknowledges [article 1(2)] that in certain sectors Member States often grant special or exclusive rights to particular undertakings, or make payments or give some other kind of compensation to particular undertakings entrusted with the operation of services of general economic interest which are common occurrences in the Community's ports sector. These undertakings are often also in competition with other undertakings and may be public, private or of a mixed public-private nature.

The appropriate level of transparency should be achieved if the following emerge clearly:

  • the costs and revenues associated with different activities;
  • full details of the methods by which costs and revenues are assigned or allocated to different activities.

and if the following is carried out:

(a) the internal accounts corresponding to different activities are separate;

(b) all costs and revenues are correctly assigned or allocated on the basis of consistently applied and objectively justifiable cost accounting principles;

(c) the cost accounting principles according to which separate accounts are maintained are clearly established.

As with Article (1), the obligations apply to undertakings irrespective of their legal structure or whether or not the activities in question are carried out by a distinct body.

The Transparency Directive does not apply without exceptions. It is of particular relevance for the ports sector that its obligations only apply to undertakings whose total annual net turnover for each of the last two years exceeded € 40 million. In cases where the compensation for the fulfilment of services of general economic interest has been fixed for an appropriate period following an open, transparent and non-discriminatory procedure the Transparency Directive does not require such undertakings to maintain separate accounts.

3.2.2. Proposed Directive concerning market access to port services.

The Commission proposes (in Article 12) that where the managing body of a port provides port services, it must separate the accounts of its ports services activities from the accounts of its other activities, in accordance with current commercial practice and generally recognised accounting principles. This should ensure that:

(a) the internal accounts corresponding to different activities are separate;

(b) all costs and revenues are correctly assigned or allocated on the basis of consistently applied and objectively justifiable cost accounting principles;

(c) the cost accounting principles according to which separate accounts are maintained are clearly established.

The auditor's report on the annual accounts must indicate the existence or, of course, non-existence, of financial flows between port services activity of the managing body of a port and its other activities.

The same rules should apply where, in application of the rules of the proposed Directive, the managing body of a port is the sole supplier of a specific port service.

The Commission has considered whether the level of transparency should be enhanced either by an appropriate modification of the 'Transparency Directive' or by proposing a regulation similar to Regulation 1107/70 on the granting of aid to transport by rail, road and inland waterway, which contains certain information requirements.

An appropriate modification of the Transparency Directive would have been, and remains, a feasible option because prior modifications of it were made in order to take account of sectoral specificities, and there is no reason why a similar approach could not be made for the ports sector.

Equally, a regulation comparable to Regulation 1107/70 with appropriate transparency rules remains an option, all the more so since ports are, contrary to the land transport modes, not covered by specific legislation on aid.

However, the Commission believes that a combination of the application of the modified Transparency Directive and the introduction of accounting requirements in the port services sector will significantly increase the transparency levels in ports. Under these circumstances it has been decided not to propose a change of Directive 80/723/EEC (as amended). This option, and the other one described above, remain and recourse may be had to them if the levels of transparency in the sector are not enhanced as a result of the above measures.

3.3. State aids to ports .

The debate following the publication of the Green Paper and work on the inventory have confirmed that the financing of ports and maritime infrastructure in the Community continues to vary considerably, reflecting the considerable differences in the way in which their ownership and organisation has been approached.

The Commission has been requested to issue guidelines on port state aids for the construction of port infrastructures.

The key reason given to support this request is that in other sectors the Commission has issued a series of guidelines dealing essentially with the conditions under which state aid may be authorised. Equally, certain categories of aid exist which the Commission has said it will authorise and which, subject to exclusions, may well apply in the ports sector as well. The existence of guidelines in other sectors is not a sufficient reason for issuing formal Commission guidelines on state aid in ports, all the more since stakeholders in favour of state aid guidelines explicitly oppose state aid to ports.

On the other hand the Commission is fully aware that guidance and clarification of existing rules would be of help both to Member States, the port authorities and, indeed, the Commission itself. However, such clarification, apart from relying on the Treaty rules, has to be built up from case law. With regard to ports there is little case law. And as clarifications of the Treaty rules should not be built up from theoretical situations whilst reality is different and not always transparent, any attempt on clarification must be qualified, for the time being, as a theoretical exercise: the Commission will continue to carry out case-by-case examinations where the facts and specificities of each case alone determine the outcome.

State aid is defined by article 87(1) of the Treaty as "aid granted by a Member State or through State resources in any form whatsoever".

State aid can therefore take any one of a number of forms, e.g. grants; loans at less than a commercial rate of interest and guarantees; total or partial exemption from charges, taxes or social contributions; fiscal advantages resulting from accelerated or enhanced depreciation schemes; contributions to operating or training costs; benefits in kind such as free provision of services.

Article 87(1) further stipulates that only selective aid, i.e. aid given to specific undertakings or sectors of undertakings constitutes state aid; genuinely non-selective and non-discriminatory measures are outside the scope of state aid.

Any selective state aid which distorts or threatens to distort competition shall, insofar as it affects trade between Member States, be incompatible with the common market.

Article 87(2) lists three categories for aid which, as a matter of law, are considered as being compatible with the common market. Article 87(3) lists five categories which, on examination by the Commission, may be found to be compatible with the common market.

Not only private undertakings are subject to the state aid rules of the Treaty, but also public undertakings and undertakings to which Member States grant special or exclusive rights (article 86(1)) or which Member States entrust with the operation of services of general economic interest (article 86(2)).

Article 88 of the Treaty obliges Member States to notify any plans to grant or alter aid to the Commission to obtain approval.

Although in the port sector interested parties have come to distinguish between investments in port infrastructure, superstructure, mobile assets and operational services, this distinction cannot replace the key criterion set out by the Treaty for the definition of state aid, namely that of selectivity under Article 87(1). This criterion remains the only benchmark for deciding whether a concrete investment measure, no matter whether it is categorised as port infrastructure, superstructure, mobile asset or operational service, constitutes an aid or not.

As regards infrastructure a subdivision into 'public (general)' and 'user-specific' infrastructure is seen as helpful by interested parties.

'Public (general)' infrastructure is open to all users on a non-discriminatory basis. It includes maritime access and maintenance (e.g. dikes, breakwaters, locks and other high water protection measures; navigable channels, including dredging and ice-breaking navigation aids, lights, buoys, beacons; floating pontoon ramps in tidal areas); public land transport facilities within the port area, short connecting links to the national transport networks or TENs; and infrastructure for utilities up to the terminal site. Investments in such infrastructure are normally considered by the Commission as general measures, being expenditures incurred by the state in the framework of its responsibilities for planning and developing a transport system in the interests of the general public provided the infrastructure is de jure and de facto open to all users, actual or potential, in accordance with Community legislation. However, the characteristics of a specific case may show that such infrastructure benefits a specific undertaking and may therefore warrant the conclusion of aid despite its prima facie appearance as public infrastructure..

'User-specific' infrastructure includes yards, jetties, pipes and cables for utilities on the terminal sites of a port; works that make the terminal site "ripe for construction" (i.e. rough levelling and - if necessary - the demolition of existing buildings and structures). In general, if public authorities prepare land in their possession for development and sell it or lease it at market rates (following the kind of procedures indicated in the land sales communication) the Commission would not regard such investments in infrastructure as state aid. This would be different if, for example, the development were done with a particular end-user in mind.

Two particular investment areas, namely docks and quay walls do not easily fit into either of the above-mentioned groups. Indeed, whereas for each of the above examples situations could be envisaged where the general conclusions would not apply , the specificities of any development and the variety of options make it impossible even to draw conclusions of a very general nature for works concerning docks and quay walls. It is therefore clear that the factual situation, potential and/or concrete beneficiaries, size and measurements of the installations and their actual and/or potential users will play a key role in any assessment by Member States and/or the Commission.

Investments in superstructures may include all types of buildings (warehouses, workshops, offices) and all types of fixed or semi-mobile equipment such as cranes and ramps. Such investments normally favour certain undertakings and thus constitute aid which may, however, where the conditions are fulfilled, benefit from the exemptions provided for in the Treaty.

It has been claimed that an investment in superstructure should not be considered a state aid where there will be full cost recovery from the user.

However, the Commission cannot accept such a general conclusion. An undertaking which is given the money for an investment in infrastructure or equipment or financed on favourable terms, or provided with the assets themselves for use by itself or its clients, is certainly advantaged in a number of ways. Its balance sheet will be improved (net assets, debt/equity) as will its profit and loss account and flow of funds by comparison with a port undertaking which has to finance the investment from its own resources or to borrow. Cost recovery from users does not remove these advantages which in themselves constitute a distortion of competition, unless the choice of the beneficiary and the terms on which it obtained the use of the facilities were reached as a result of an open and non-discriminatory procedure. However, in particular cases where the exemptions of the Treaty apply, such distortion may be considered compatible with the Treaty.

Public support to investments in mobile assets and operational services, e.g. those of individual port service providers, generally favours certain undertakings and it is difficult to foresee a situation where this is not the case.

Such support would be a state aid, again with the possible application of the exemption rules of the Treaty.

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Le conflit israélo-iranien pousse Maersk à suspendre ses escales au port de Haïfa
Copenhague
Ceux du port d'Ashdod continueront quant à eux.
Engagement des nations d'Europe du Nord à contrer la flotte fantôme russe
Varsovie
Si les navires ne battent pas un pavillon valable en mer Baltique et en mer du Nord, précisent-ils, nous prendrons les mesures appropriées dans le respect du droit international.
Le trafic de marchandises dans les ports français stable au premier trimestre 2025
Le trafic de marchandises dans les ports français stable au premier trimestre 2025
La Défense
Les conteneurs et le vrac liquide sont en plein essor. Augmentation des charges de déchargement et diminution des charges de chargement.
Cognolato (Assiterminal) : Aujourd'hui plus que jamais, nous avons besoin d'une politique portuaire cohérente
Rome
« Toutes les questions critiques mises en évidence ces dernières années restent encore ouvertes », a-t-il souligné.
Alessandro Pitto confirmé comme président de Fedespedi
Milan
Le conseil d'administration, le conseil d'arbitrage et le conseil des commissaires aux comptes ont été renouvelés
Une action de protestation des marins grecs est houleuse, les syndicats PENEN et PNO lançant de très graves accusations, y compris mutuelles
Le Pirée
La grève, déclarée illégale par la justice, bloque certains navires du groupe Attica dans le port de Patras
Saipem remporte un contrat pour un projet d'extraction de phosphate en Algérie qui comprend la modernisation du port d'Annaba
Milan
La construction de lignes ferroviaires est également prévue
Le canal de Suez célèbre le retour des transits de porte-conteneurs de grande capacité
Le canal de Suez célèbre le retour des transits de porte-conteneurs de grande capacité
Ismaïlia
Aujourd'hui, il a été traversé par le navire « CMA CGM Osiris » qui peut transporter 15 536 EVP
L'OMI, l'OIT, l'ICS et l'ITF demandent instamment la protection des droits des marins contre une criminalisation injuste
Londres
Les « Lignes directrices sur le traitement équitable des marins détenus en relation avec des infractions présumées » ont été adoptées en avril
Les nouveaux tarifs douaniers de Trump affectent également le trafic de conteneurs au port de Long Beach
Long Beach
Au cours des cinq premiers mois de 2025, une augmentation de +17,2% a été enregistrée
Transfert du port de Carrare de l'AdSP ligure à l'AdSP toscane non sans discussion avec les opérateurs
Milan
Dario Perioli, FHP, Grendi et Tarros le demandent
Jusqu'à 768 milliards de dollars d'investissements nécessaires pour adapter les ports mondiaux à la montée du niveau de la mer
New York
Le port de Los Angeles ressent l'impact des nouveaux tarifs sur le trafic de conteneurs
Los Angeles
Une baisse de -4,8% a été enregistrée en mai
Assagenti propose un groupe de travail pour résoudre les problèmes portuaires, logistiques et industriels
Gênes
Un organe consultatif de « résolution de problèmes » composé, en plus des catégories du cluster maritime, des industries manufacturières du quadrant Nord-Ouest
Le trafic de fret au port de Singapour a chuté de -4,6% en mai
Singapour
Une nouvelle grue renversée pour la livraison dans la nouvelle zone portuaire de Tuas
Au premier trimestre 2025, le trafic de marchandises sur le réseau ferroviaire suisse a diminué de -6,4%
Neuchâtel
Performance de service à 2,35 milliards de tonnes-km, en baisse de -8,2%
L'ANGOPI craint que les nouvelles mesures visant à assurer la continuité maritime ne pénalisent les services d'amarrage
L'ANGOPI craint que les nouvelles mesures visant à assurer la continuité maritime ne pénalisent les services d'amarrage
Ischia
Pouvoir : il faut les soustraire à un mécanisme pervers
Le néerlandais HES International va exploiter un terminal vraquier dans le port de Marseille-Fos
Marseille
Le contrat de concession aura une durée minimale de 30 ans
Le gouvernement d'Ibiza s'oppose au programme de nuitée à bord des ferries de Trasmed
Ibiza/Valence
Il est considéré comme un « hôtel clandestin », tandis que la compagnie le définit comme un service de croisière
Bruno Pisano nommé commissaire extraordinaire de l'AdSP de la mer Ligure orientale
Rome
Il prendra ses fonctions lundi prochain
Federlogistica propose une comparaison entre les opérateurs sur la taxe de congestion en attendant une solution du gouvernement
Gênes
Au cours des cinq premiers mois de 2025, le trafic de conteneurs dans le port de Gioia Tauro a augmenté de +10,3%
Joie Taureau
1 813 071 EVP ont été traités
Trasportounito, les temps d'attente des camions dans les ports doivent être payés
Gênes
Tagnochetti : La taxe portuaire vise à redistribuer plus équitablement les coûts de toutes les perturbations
Nomination des commissaires des AdSP de la Tyrrhénienne du Nord, de la Ligurie Ionienne et de la Ligurie occidentale
Rome/Gênes
Les syndicats préoccupés par l'avenir des travailleurs du terminal portuaire de Gênes
L’instabilité politique et la transition écologique sont les principaux problèmes auxquels le transport maritime est confronté
Londres
Ceci est mis en évidence dans le « Rapport du baromètre maritime ICS 2024-2025 »
Présentation du nouveau terminal à conteneurs du port de Termini Imerese
Palerme
Transfert du trafic géré par Portitalia vers le port de Palerme
Une enquête du GCMD confirme l'engagement du secteur maritime en faveur de la décarbonisation
Singapour
Les ports préoccupés par le manque de certitude quant à la demande des compagnies maritimes
La Commission européenne a réidentifié Port-Saïd Est et Tanger Med comme ports de transbordement de conteneurs voisins
Bruxelles
Le transport routier étend l'application des frais de congestion au port de Livourne
Livourne/Rome/Milan/Gênes
Fedespedi, ils ne résolvent pas les problèmes, mais ont pour seul effet d'augmenter les coûts
Le nouveau poste de contrôle frontalier a été inauguré dans le port de Livourne
Livourne
La structure a coûté 15 millions d'euros
En avril, les transits de navires par le canal de Suez ont diminué de -7,7%
En avril, les transits de navires par le canal de Suez ont diminué de -7,7%
Caire
Au cours des quatre premiers mois de 2025, la baisse du trafic maritime a été de -14,9%
Accord pour la numérisation des flux de trafic autoroutier avec les ports de Trieste et de Monfalcone
Trieste
Il a été signé par l'Autorité du système portuaire de la mer Adriatique et par Autostrade Alto Adriatico
Dominguez (OMI) appelle à investir dans la décarbonisation du transport maritime
Dominguez (OMI) appelle à investir dans la décarbonisation du transport maritime
Munich/Bruxelles
Opportunity Green, Seas At Risk et Transport & Environment exhortent les nations à inclure les émissions du transport maritime dans leurs contributions déterminées au niveau national.
RFI et le MIT signent la mise à jour du contrat de programme pour environ 2,1 milliards
Rome
Environ 500 millions d'euros attendus pour la gestion du réseau ferroviaire
San Giorgio del Porto livre un navire pour le soutage de gaz naturel liquéfié
Gênes
Il a été construit pour Genova Trasporti Marittimi
Pisano (AdSP Liguria Orientale) : les ports de La Spezia et de Carrare se sont intégrés presque parfaitement
La Spezia/Bari
Nomination d'un commissaire extraordinaire de l'Autorité portuaire de la mer Adriatique méridionale
Raffaele Latrofa nommé président de l'AdSP de la mer Tyrrhénienne centre-nord
Rome
Il est l'adjoint au maire de Pise
Le constructeur naval indien Mazagon Dock acquiert le contrôle du chantier naval de Colombo au Sri Lanka
Bombay
Investissement d'environ 53 millions de dollars
Le Commissaire de l'Autorité Portuaire de la Mer Ligure Occidentale s'est vu attribuer les pouvoirs et prérogatives du Comité de Gestion
Gênes
La mesure en attendant le rétablissement des organes de direction ordinaires
Le plan opérationnel triennal 2025-2027 de l'Autorité portuaire centrale de l'Adriatique a été approuvé
Ancône
Avis favorable du Sea Resource Partnership Body
La réunion publique du Centre international d'études sur les conteneurs se tiendra à Gênes le 2 juillet
Gênes
Il traitera des transformations physiques du conteneur et de la digitalisation des processus
Andrea Ormesani est le nouveau président d'Assosped Venezia
Venise
Renouvellement du conseil d'administration. Paolo Salvaro conserve son poste de secrétaire général.
Witte (ISU) : En 2024, le secteur du sauvetage de navires s'est stabilisé par rapport au niveau le plus bas d'il y a deux ans
Londres
Le finlandais Elomatic va installer des propulseurs de tunnel sur 11 navires de croisière Carnival
Turku
Les travaux débuteront à l'automne prochain et se termineront en 2028
L'assemblée des Assarmatori se tiendra à Rome le 1er juillet
Rome
« La Méditerranée à contre-courant » le thème de la rencontre
Fincantieri a livré le nouveau navire de croisière Viking Vesta à l'américain Viking
Trieste/Los Angeles
Il a été construit dans le chantier naval d'Ancône
Les garde-côtes de Gênes ont placé le porte-conteneurs PL Germany en détention administrative
Gênes
La marine italienne commande deux nouveaux navires de combat polyvalents à Fincantieri
Trieste
La commande passée à l'entreprise de construction navale s'élève à 700 millions d'euros
Le groupe MSC va gérer les services de croisière dans les ports de Bari et de Brindisi
Bari
Concession de dix ans avec possibilité de prolongation
La Kombiverkehr allemande renoue avec les bénéfices en 2024
Francfort-sur-le-Main
Le niveau des revenus est resté inchangé à 434,6 millions d'euros.
Deltamarin concevra les six nouveaux navires ro-pax commandés par Grimaldi pour les routes méditerranéennes
Turku
LES DÉPARTS
Visual Sailing List
Départ
Destination:
- liste alphabétique
- liste des nations
- zones géographiques
La pratique de la sous-traitance dans la logistique européenne crée un marché du travail parallèle où les droits ne sont pas appliqués
Bruxelles
Présentation du rapport « Désolé, nous vous avons sous-traité »
Demain, Grendi lancera le quatrième navire du groupe sur les routes à destination et en provenance de la Sardaigne
Milan
« Grendi Star », d'une capacité de charge de 2 800 mètres linéaires, reliera Marina di Carrara et Cagliari
Signature d'un contrat de soutien opérationnel aux frégates FREMM entre Orizzonte Sistemi Navali et l'OCCAR
Tarente
L'accord a une valeur totale d'environ 764 millions d'euros
Appel à réformer l'ensemble du système de formation des conducteurs dans le secteur des transports
Rome
Sept propositions présentées
Dans le port de Gioia Tauro, les soldats de la Guardia di Finanza ont saisi 228 kilos de cocaïne
Reggio de Calabre
Deux dockers arrêtés
Port de Livourne, nouvel observatoire pour trouver des solutions au problème de congestion portuaire
Livourne
Marilli : Nous chercherons des solutions pour parvenir à une éventuelle révocation de la taxe portuaire
Lockton PL Ferrari a clôturé le dernier exercice avec un chiffre d'affaires brut de 34 millions de dollars
Gênes
Le volume des primes d'assurance a atteint 350 millions
Le groupe polonais Trans Polonia acquiert la holding néerlandaise Nijman/Zeetank
Tczew
Elle est spécialisée dans le transport et la logistique de produits liquides et gazeux
d'Amico Tankers vend deux pétroliers construits en 2011 pour 36,2 millions de dollars
Luxembourg
Ils seront livrés aux acheteurs d'ici fin juillet et le 21 décembre.
L'Académie de la marine marchande italienne prévoit 13 nouveaux cours gratuits
Gênes
Plus de 300 postes disponibles
Une délégation de Wista Italie visite les ports de Catane et d'Augusta
Catane/août
L'association est composée de femmes qui occupent des postes à responsabilité dans les secteurs maritime, logistique et commercial.
Au cours des cinq premiers mois de 2025, le port d'Algésiras a traité 1,9 million de conteneurs (-6,3%)
Algésiras
Les conteneurs vides ont diminué de -5,5% et les conteneurs pleins de -6,4%
Reway Group entre dans le secteur de la maintenance des infrastructures ferroviaires portuaires
Licciana Nardi
Deux contrats attribués par l'AdSP de la mer Ligure orientale
Delcomar et Ensamar reprennent les services maritimes avec les petites îles sardes
Cagliari
L'appel d'offres pour la concession des connexions pour six ans a été attribué
Port de Trieste, le nouveau Gurrieri torpille le nouveau Torbianelli
Trieste
Russo (Pd) : c'est un jeu de pouvoir sordide
SeaLead, de Singapour, élargit son offre de transport maritime pour relier la Turquie et l'Italie
Singapour
Route connectée aux services transitant par le canal de Suez
Le programme américain Container Security Initiative a été étendu au Maroc
Rabat
Amrani : Consolidons le rôle de Tanger Med en tant que hub maritime sûr et de classe mondiale
Premier trimestre très positif pour la compagnie grecque Euroseas
Athènes
Pittas : la dynamique positive s'est poursuivie au deuxième trimestre
Assonat et SACE présentent un plan pour les ports touristiques italiens
Rome
Kuehne+Nagel a ouvert une nouvelle succursale à Naples
Milan
L'objectif est de soutenir la croissance opérationnelle du groupe dans le sud de l'Italie
RINA a acquis la totalité du capital de Finnish Foreship
Helsinki
L'entreprise basée à Helsinki est spécialisée dans le conseil dans le domaine de l'ingénierie marine et mécanique.
Baisse du trafic de conteneurs dans les ports de Barcelone et de Valence en mai
Barcelone/Valence
Reprise des conteneurs en transit au port catalan
Le trafic annuel de marchandises dans les ports grecs est stable en 2024
Le Pirée
Les volumes nationaux augmentent, tandis que le commerce extérieur diminue
Perplexité des transitaires, des agents en douane et des agents maritimes de La Spezia face au transfert du port de Carrare à l'AdSP toscane
L'épice
Timidement, ils « espèrent que les progrès accomplis jusqu'à présent seront pris en compte »
Francesco Mastro nommé commissaire extraordinaire de l'Autorité portuaire de la mer Adriatique du Sud
Rome
Il prendra ses fonctions le 30 juin.
John Denholm devient le nouveau président de la Chambre internationale de la marine marchande
Athènes
Il succédera à Emanuele Grimaldi dans un an
Des commissaires extraordinaires des deux autorités du système portuaire ligure ont été installés
Gênes/La Spezia
Matteo Paroli et Bruno Pisano à la tête des institutions
Le trafic de conteneurs au port de Hong Kong chute fortement en mai
Hong Kong
1,05 million d'EVP ont été traités (-12,7%)
Assogasliquidi-Federchimica montre la voie pour accélérer la décarbonisation du transport routier et maritime
Rome
Amadei : Notre secteur est prêt et le temps est venu de faire des choix industriels courageux
Le commandement du pétrolier Eagle S accusé d'avoir sectionné des câbles sous-marins dans le golfe de Finlande
Avantages
L'accident a été causé par l'ancre du navire
Plateforme en ligne pour signaler les problèmes critiques qui mettent en danger les travailleurs des transports
Gênes
Il a été préparé par Fit Cisl Liguria
GNV va créer une liaison estivale directe entre Civitavecchia et Tunis
Gênes
Il longera la route historique via Palerme
L'unification des concessions de Grimaldi dans le port de Barcelone est terminée
Madrid/Barcelone
Le contrat expire le 20 septembre 2035.
Au cours des cinq premiers mois de 2025, le trafic de marchandises dans les ports russes a chuté de -4,9 %
Saint-Pétersbourg
Une baisse d'environ -12% a été enregistrée en mai
Raben Logistics Group crée une filiale en Turquie
Milan
Elle comptera 20 employés et un entrepôt cross-dock de 2 000 mètres carrés
Alberto Dellepiane confirmé comme président d'Assorimorchiatori
Rome
La composition de l'ensemble de la direction de l'association reste inchangée
Accord entre Fincantieri et PMM indonésien pour développer des solutions pour faire face aux nouveaux défis sous-marins non conventionnels
PORTS
Ports Italiens:
Ancône Gênes Ravenne
Augusta Gioia Tauro Salerne
Bari La Spezia Savone
Brindisi Livourne Taranto
Cagliari Naples Trapani
Carrara Palerme Trieste
Civitavecchia Piombino Venise
Interports Italiens: liste Ports du Monde: Carte
BANQUE DES DONNÉES
Armateurs Réparateurs et Constructeurs de Navires
Transitaires Fournisseurs de Navires
Agences Maritimes Transporteurs routiers
MEETINGS
L'assemblée des Assarmatori se tiendra à Rome le 1er juillet
Rome
« La Méditerranée à contre-courant » le thème de la rencontre
La réunion publique du Centre international d'études sur les conteneurs se tiendra à Gênes le 2 juillet
Gênes
››› Archives
REVUE DE LA PRESSE
US has its eye on Greek ports
(Kathimerini)
Proposed 30% increase for port tariffs to be in phases, says Loke
(Free Malaysia Today)
››› Index Revue de la Presse
FORUM des opérateurs maritimes
et de la logistique
Intervento del presidente Tomaso Cognolato
Roma, 19 giugno 2025
››› Archives
Attribution des travaux d'adaptation structurelle du quai 23 du port d'Ancône
Ancône
Intervention de plus de 11,8 millions d'euros
Conférence sur le rôle du GNL et du bioGNL pour la décarbonation des transports et de l'industrie
Rome
L'événement Federchimica-Assogasliquidi aura lieu lundi à Rome
Le néerlandais Bolidt renforce sa présence dans le secteur des navires de croisière avec l'acquisition de l'américain Boteka
Hendrik Ido Ambacht
Contship Italia a acquis la société génoise de services douaniers STS
Melzo
L'entreprise ligurienne a été fondée en 1985
Francesco Benevolo a été nommé commissaire extraordinaire de l'AdSP de la mer Adriatique centre-nord
Rome
Il est le directeur des opérations de RAM - Logistique, Infrastructure et Transport
Montaresi démissionne de son poste de commissaire de l'Autorité portuaire de la Ligurie orientale
L'épice
Au cours des huit mois d’administration – souligne-t-il – nous n’avons pas perdu une seule seconde.
Gurrieri a été nommé commissaire extraordinaire de l'AdSP de la mer Adriatique orientale
Trieste
En attendant l'achèvement du processus formel de désignation du président
Les commissaires de l'AdSP de la Ligurie occidentale ont remis leur mandat au ministre Salvini
Gênes
La décision fait partie du processus de désignation et de nomination des nouveaux dirigeants
La Confetra critique les dispositions du décret-loi sur les infrastructures pour le transport routier
Rome
La Confédération demande le blocage du processus de nomination des présidents des autorités portuaires
Les sociétés taïwanaises Evergreen, Yang Ming et WHL ont enregistré une baisse de leurs revenus en mai
Keelung/Taipei
La baisse est accentuée pour les deux principales entreprises
Le sud-coréen KSOE remporte une commande pour la construction de huit porte-conteneurs de 15 900 EVP
Seongnam
La valeur unitaire de chaque navire est d’environ 221 millions de dollars.
Premier terminal portuaire pour le trafic automobile de la compagnie grecque Neptune Lines
Le Pirée
Il sera inauguré l'année prochaine dans le port français de Port-La Nouvelle
L'assemblée de l'association des agents et courtiers maritimes génois se tiendra le 16 juin
Gênes
Table ronde sur Gênes, plaque tournante du Nord-Ouest et de la Méditerranée
Conseil d'administration de BN di Navigazione renouvelé
Gênes
BluNavy vise à atteindre un million de passagers d'ici 2025
Viking Line conçoit le plus grand navire ro-pax entièrement électrique au monde
Viking Line conçoit le plus grand navire ro-pax entièrement électrique au monde
Åland
Trafic mensuel record de conteneurs dans les ports turcs
Ankara
En mai, près de 1,4 million d'EVP ont été traités (+17,6%).
Sergio Landolfi a été élu président de l'Association des douanes du port de La Spezia
L'épice
Le conseil d'administration a été renouvelé
L'élite de l'industrie des ferries participera à la conférence Interferry à Salerne en octobre
Victoria
Événement intitulé « Connexions »
Uniport lance une initiative pour soutenir la recherche sur la SLA
Rome
Collecte de fonds pour le Centre clinique NeMO Serena Foundation Onlus
Le Propeller Club de Gênes a analysé les risques et les opportunités de l'utilisation de l'IA dans les secteurs maritime et des assurances
Gênes
L’importance de la formation à l’utilisation de la technologie a été soulignée
Les Chantiers de l'Atlantique livrent le yacht de croisière de luxe Luminara à la Ritz-Carlton Yacht Collection
Saint-Nazaire
Le navire fera ses débuts en Alaska
Le transport maritime, avec les fournisseurs et les entrepreneurs navals, est la pierre angulaire du commerce italien
Port Cervo
Congrès annuel de l'ANPAN en Sardaigne
Uiltrasporti, risque de chaos dans les ports italiens en raison des retards dans la nomination des présidents de l'AdSP
Rome
Si nous continuons à répartir les postes sans tenir compte des compétences des futurs présidents, prévient le syndicat, nous serons obligés de nous mobiliser.
- Via Raffaele Paolucci 17r/19r - 16129 Gênes - ITALIE
tél.: +39.010.2462122, fax: +39.010.2516768, e-mail
Numéro de TVA: 03532950106
Presse engistrement: 33/96 Tribunal de Gênes
Direction: Bruno Bellio
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