Rain Lifts Rhine River Levels in Germany but Shipping Still Limited

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Rain has raised water levels on the Rhine in Germany but most of the river remains too shallow for cargo vessels to sail fully loaded, commodity traders said on Wednesday, following a bout of dry weather in August.

Ship operators imposed surcharges on freight rates to compensate for vessels sailing partly empty, increasing costs for cargo owners.

Shallow water continues to hinder shipping on most of the Rhine in Germany including Duisburg, Cologne and the chokepoint of Kaub, but vessels are able to take on larger loads, traders said.

More rain is forecast in river catchment areas on Wednesday and the coming days and this is expected to raise the river to levels allowing normal shipping later this week or early next week, they said.

The Rhine is an important shipping route for commodities such as grains, minerals, ores, chemicals, ores, coal and oil products, including heating oil.

German companies faced supply bottlenecks and production problems in summer 2022 after a drought and heat-wave led to unusually low water levels on the river.

But repeated rain earlier this summer had kept Rhine water levels high, enabling shipping to mostly operate normally until late August.


(Reuters - Reporting by Michael Hogan, editing by Gareth Jones)

Categories: Coastal/Inland Europe Infrastructure

Related Stories

Number of Transits Through Panama Canal Edged Down in August

Stena Bulk Appoints Seasystems as Exclusive Global Partner for Jettyless LNG Technology

Vattenfall Secures Dutch Base to Support Germany’s Largest Offshore Wind Farm

Current News

Panama Canal Unveils Decade Roadmap of Transformation

Nissen Kaiun Becomes Stakeholder in Econowind

China's Hold on Global Ports focus of Trump Administration

DP World Introduces New Quay Crane and Electric RTG Cranes at Mundra Terminal

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News