Rhine Reopened to Shipping as Water Level Falls

January 29, 2018

© william87 / Adobe Stock
© william87 / Adobe Stock

Germany's Rhine river was reopened to shipping on Monday after waters fell, following its closure for the past week as rain and melting snow raised water levels, authorities said.

High water mostly peaked in north Germany over the weekend, but levels have fallen substantially allowing vessel sailings on the entire stretch, the river flood monitoring agency said. Some vessel speed restrictions, however, remain in north Germany, it said.

Rising water levels mean vessels do not have enough space to sail under bridges.

The Rhine is an important shipping route for commodities including minerals, coal and oil products such as heating oil, grains and animal feed. It is also an important route for Switzerland's imports.



(Reporting by Michael Hogan; Editing by Biju Dwarakanath)

Logistics News

How JobMarineMan Is Building a Direct Crew Recruitment Ecosystem

How JobMarineMan Is Building a Direct Crew Recruitment Ecosystem

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

BMT, Austal Sign Engineering Alliance to Support Shipbuilding Projects

BMT, Austal Sign Engineering Alliance to Support Shipbuilding Projects

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Drone attack on Panama flagged ship in Black Sea kills one, injures two
BMW chairman: 'We are on the right track' as profit warnings hit shares
Ryanair extends CEO O'Leary's Contract to 2032 and offers a EUR150 million Bonus