Marine Link
Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Saxony Agrees to Adjustment of Navigation Channel

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

April 4, 2012

The cabinet decision taken in Lower Saxony on Tuesday, April 3, 2012, means that the required assent from the three states of Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony for the adjustment of the navigation channel on the Lower and Outer Elbe has now been received. 

Given the significance of the deepening of the navigation channel, the German Administrative Court in Leipzig will in the first and final instances be responsible for hearing any possible objections. The period for lodging these runs for four weeks from the date of display of draft final approval.  
 
Against the background of the 894 ultra-large vessels (AGF) handled in Hamburg during 2011, the adjustment of the shipping channels in the Lower and Outer Elbe is one of the most important development projects for the Port of Hamburg in 2012. This will ensure that the largest containerships and bulk carriers continue to reach Hamburg in the future. After completion, ships with a draft up to 13.80 meters will be able to leave the Port of Hamburg independent of the tides and up to 14.80 meters dependent on the tides.

To limit the effects of the channel adjustment on the flora and fauna and the surrounding environment as much as possible, an engineering concept has been developed, enabling the hydrological and, therefore, the ecological consequences to be considerably minimized. Numerous measures will be adopted to completely compensate for any remaining ecological effects.

“It was only right to take time to arrive at a fair reconciliation of the different interests,” said Frank Horch, Hamburg’s Minister of Economics, Transport and Innovation. “The decision by the cabinet in Lower Saxony demonstrates not only that adjustment of the navigational channel involves a whole series of advantages for Lower Saxony, but also that an excellent compromise has been found with regard to the feared disadvantages. This satisfactory outcome means that the official approval procedure can now be completed.”

Those responsible for granting planning approval at the Waterways and Shipping Directorate (WSD) North and in the City of Hamburg will now be incorporating the results of the negotiations into the planning approval, which currently exists only in draft form, and will then produce the final planning approval document. The procedure also provides for the planning approval along with the supporting documents to be displayed for scrutiny in the communities affected along the Elbe at the end of May, following an appropriate public announcement.
 

Subscribe for
Maritime Reporter E-News

Maritime Reporter E-News is the maritime industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email five times per week