The National - News

Europe’s largest port expects slight recovery in 2024 cargo volumes as inflation eases

▶ Rotterdam port is in discussion­s with Middle East companies to boost imports of hydrogen derivative­s

- JOHN BENNY Rotterdam, the Netherland­s

Rotterdam port, Europe’s largest, expects a “small” recovery in cargo volumes this year, following a decline in 2023, as global inflation levels continue to ease, its chief executive has said.

“This year, you will see a small recovery because inflation has reduced to acceptable levels,” Boudewijn Siemons told The National on the sidelines of the World Energy Congress. “Unless some black swan event happens … we expect a slight recovery this year … not a huge one, but an incrementa­l one.”

Last year’s total cargo throughput at Rotterdam stood at 438.8 million tonnes, a drop of 6.1 per cent from 2022.

In the first quarter of this year, total throughput at the port dipped by 1.4 per cent to 110.1 million tonnes, compared with the same period a year earlier.

Mr Siemons said he was not concerned about the disruption in the Red Sea or a potential escalation in the Middle East that could hit global trade.

“I’m concerned about it on a humanitari­an basis but, logistical­ly, with ships going around the Cape of Good Hope, we can manage those disturbanc­es … [the] supply chain can digest it,” he said.

Several major energy companies and shipping lines have rerouted their vessels around South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope to avoid the threat of attacks by Yemen’s Houthi militant group in the Red Sea, a vital trade artery.

Mr Siemons’ remarks come as inflation, which had rose sharply at the start of the Russia-Ukraine war in February 2022, is forecast to drop this year due to lower energy prices and reduced inflation in consumer goods and food.

Global headline inflation is forecast to fall to 5.9 per cent this year, from 2023’s 6.8 per cent average, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

“The global economy has been depressed for two years … we’re simply a mirror to the global economy,” Mr Siemons said.

Rotterdam port, the 10th-largest in the world, is key to the Netherland­s’ plan to be an importer and transit port for hydrogen within Europe.

Rotterdam aims to supply 4.6 million tonnes a year of hydrogen to Europe by 2030 from local production and imports.

“Rotterdam now provides 13 per cent of Europe’s energy need … and that’s our role in the fossil [fuel] world. We want to maintain that role in the renewable energy world,” Mr Siemons said.

“That means that we have to actually make sure that everything that happens here is aimed at making that transition and securing that position.”

This year, Spain’s Cepsa signed an agreement with three Dutch companies to supply green ammonia to a terminal in the port of Rotterdam.

Green ammonia, derived from hydrogen generated through renewable energy sources, can contribute to the transport of green hydrogen, offering a solution for decarbonis­ing various industries.

Rotterdam is also looking to receive hydrogen shipments from the Middle East and North Africa. The port is in discussion­s with several companies to arrange imports of hydrogen derivative­s, Mr Siemons said.

“First investment­s have already been announced to increase the ammonia imports and we are talking to more companies about that possibilit­y, including companies that are active in the Middle East.”

Despite hydrogen’s growing potential, critics within the energy industry have underlined its high cost of production and the absence of a well-establishe­d market.

Currently, almost all hydrogen produced worldwide is “grey”, which means it is made from natural gas.

Mr Siemons said there are several subsidies and initiative­s in the EU to support the switch from grey hydrogen to green hydrogen, adding that hydrogen produced from clean energy already has a significan­t market in north-west Europe.

He also emphasised the need to add more blue hydrogen into the mix, as the scaling up of green hydrogen production is expected to take time.

Blue hydrogen is produced from natural gas but the carbon dioxide produced during the process is captured and stored.

“If you really want to speed up the hydrogen economy, you’re going to need more sources than only green because that’s going to take some time,” Mr Siemons said.

“I believe that we need to be practical about it. The aim is to get carbon-dioxide out of the air and blue hydrogen does the job.”

The city aims to supply 4.6 million tonnes a year of hydrogen to Europe by 2030 from local production and imports

 ?? EPA ?? An LNG tanker at Rotterdam port. The Dutch city supplies 13 per cent of Europe’s energy needs, says its port chief executive Boudewijn Siemons
EPA An LNG tanker at Rotterdam port. The Dutch city supplies 13 per cent of Europe’s energy needs, says its port chief executive Boudewijn Siemons

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