By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Reading: Impact of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on Port of Antwerp
Share
Notification Show More
Latest News
MOL Selected for ‘Nadeshiko Brand’ for 3rd Consecutive Year, Reflecting Measures to Encourage Women’s Workplace Success
Shipping news
Port Arthur LNG project set to proceed
Global Maritime News
China’s major port sees no slump in cargo throughput
Port news
Procureship partners with Oriani to further strengthen digitalisation efforts of Greek shipping companies
Shipping news
Carbon Capture Study on MR Tanker Gets Go-Ahead from ABS
Global Maritime News
Aa
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
Aa
Search
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Follow US
© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.
OOLP Maritime World News > Port news > Impact of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on Port of Antwerp
Port news

Impact of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on Port of Antwerp

Last updated: 2022/04/19 at 5:57 AM
14 Views
Share
5 Min Read
SHARE


Port of Antwerp expresses its support and empathy for all the human suffering caused by the conflict in Ukraine. As a world port, the port of Antwerp is regularly confronted with the consequences of geopolitical movements. This conflict has led to a number of European sanctions against Russia. In order to monitor the impact of the crisis in the port as well as beyond, Port of Antwerp remains in close contact with customers and the competent authorities.

Update 15 April 2022
Based on the rules of the European Union, a roadmap has been drawn up for banning Russian-flagged ships from Belgian ports. This roadmap will be implemented as of Sunday, April 17. The rules were drawn up by the ministers of the North Sea and Foreign Affairs, the maritime police, Defense, Customs, the Department of Mobility and Public Works and DG Shipping.

The Maritime Information Crossroads (MIK) receives a list of the Russian ships coming to a Belgian port and follows that ship closely. The permission given to the ship is only valid for the ship, the Belgian port, the exact timing, and the goods mentioned in the permission.

The port authorities are responsible for the follow-up. For each of the permitted Russian ships arriving in the port, the port authorities must again request the proof of permitted cargo.

- Advertisement -

Goods that may be delivered to European ports are natural gas, petroleum, coal and other solid fossil fuels, all pharmaceutical, medical, agricultural and food products (such as wheat), fertilizers, and humanitarian aid. These rules will be in effect until August 10, 2022.

Update 5 April 2022
The conflict in Ukraine has led to new European sanctions against Russia, including a ban on Russian and Russian-operated ships from entering EU ports. There is an exception for agricultural and food products, humanitarian aid and energy products. We have not yet been able to fully examine the content of the measure. A meeting with DG Scheepvaart (division of FPS Mobility and Transport) is scheduled next week to further discuss the content and operational impact of this measure. At this stage, the impact in our port seems to be rather limited.

Impact of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on Port of Antwerp

Source: Port of Antwerp

Update 9 March 2022
Monitoring

There is constant monitoring of the situation by Port of Antwerp, which is in close contact with customers and other stakeholders in the port community. By doing so, it emphasises the excellent cooperation between the competent authorities, customs and the various terminals involved.

- Advertisement -

European measures
The Antwerp Port Authority does not have the authority to pursue an independent policy in response to the conflict. For instance, the Port Authority cannot impose restrictions upon companies or ships. The Port Authority implements the policies of the Belgian and the European authorities.

As such, the export of a large number of goods including those which can be used for both civilian and military purposes (“dual use”) is prohibited. Containerised cargo bound for Russia is subject to additional scrutiny by customs. More information can be found here (in Dutch). Furthermore, there is no ban on Russian-flagged or Russian-owned ships for the time being.

Facts & figures
Our port has no major maritime goods flows with Ukraine. Russia, on the other hand, was the fifth most important trade partner in 2021 with a throughput of 11.6 m tons (3.16 m tons of outbound and 8.5 m tons of inbound). This involved the following categories:
‱ Containers – 5.3 million tons (mainly plastics, wood, chemicals, automotive spare parts and paper)
‱ Liquid bulk – 4.8 million tons (mainly naphtha, diesel and fuel oil)
‱ Dry bulk – 700,000 tons (mainly fertilisers and coal)
‱ Conventional breakbulk – 650,000 tons (mainly steel imports)

In 2021, 51 unique Russian-flagged vessels entered the port of Antwerp, making a total of 108 calls out of a total of 14,181. These vessels only transported dry bulk, conventional general cargo and to a very limited extent containers.
Source: Port of Antwerp



You Might Also Like

China’s major port sees no slump in cargo throughput

Egypt’s Suez Canal signs agreement to establish solid, liquid waste management company

India: Coal, crude oil spike lead port cargo charge in FY23, shows govt data

Saudi’s King Abdulaziz Port sets new container handling record

admin April 19, 2022
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Copy Link Print
Previous Article Nakilat achieves QAR 382 million net profit for the first quarter of 2022
Next Article ENGINE: Americas Bunker Fuel Availability Outlook
- Advertisement -

Latest News

MOL Selected for ‘Nadeshiko Brand’ for 3rd Consecutive Year, Reflecting Measures to Encourage Women’s Workplace Success
Shipping news March 23, 2023
Port Arthur LNG project set to proceed
Global Maritime News March 23, 2023
China’s major port sees no slump in cargo throughput
Port news March 22, 2023
Procureship partners with Oriani to further strengthen digitalisation efforts of Greek shipping companies
Shipping news March 22, 2023

OOLP maritime news is a portal that gets latest updates and happenings from the maritime & cruise industry across the globe.

Top maritime stories

Global maritime news

International shipping news

Cruise news

Maritime ports

Security and piracy

About OOLP news

Contact us

Live maritime traffic

Events

Blog

Follow US

© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.

  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?