COSCO Shipping Lines and its Ocean Alliance plan to significantly
increase the number of calls at the Zeebrugge port, which according to
new analaysis from Alphaliner, shows that Cosco is about to realise its
ambitions to turn the Belgian port into its major North European hub.
Zeebrugge port has been in decline
in recent years as transshipment activities in the region have been largely
concentrated at Antwerp and Rotterdam.
However, following Cosco's
acquisition of the port's box terminal, CSP Zeebrugge, in 2017 and
the subsequent conclusion of a concession agreement with the port authority
early last year, the alliance will swap the Rotterdam call on the Asia-Europe NEU1 service
to Zeebrugge, reports The Loadstar, UK.
The first call will be on 11
May, part of a service operated by 11 ships of 19,000-21,000 TEU capacity,
and will add to the existing Zeebrugge call on the NEU3 Asia-Europe service,
which runs 13,300-14,500 TEU vessels.
"To coincide with the revamp of
the two Far East-North Europe loops, Cosco will include Zeebrugge in the
rotation of its North Europe-Baltic RFS service from mid-May, allowing new
connections to/from St Petersburg via Zeebrugge," Alphaliner
reports.
"Cosco Shipping Lines is
expected to bring further changes to its intra-Europe network as it starts
using Zeebrugge as a European hub with plans to organise new Zeebrugge-Dublin
and Zeebrugge-Bilbao connections in the short term," it adds.
It also reports that CSP Zeebrugge
is getting new investment to handle larger vessels, with work underway to
"raise some of the seven ship-to-shore gantries".
It explains: "Over the course
of the coming months, five units will be heightened by twelve metres, allowing
the cranes to work 12 tiers of deck containers on 'megamax' container
vessels."
Source : HKSG.
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