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Internal Waterway Shipping 2008 Results

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

March 18, 2009

Now at 12.2 million tons, the volume of goods carried between the Port of Hamburg and the hinterland by inland waterway vessel in 2008 exceeded all previous levels. This marked a 1.5 percent increase on the operating results of the previous year. In Germany as a whole, the shipment of goods by inland waterway vessel in 2008 dropped by 1.6 percent.

The most important goods categories were mineral oil products, gases, coal and agricultural and forestry products. The latter chalked up the highest rate of growth last year, followed by chemical products, fertilizers and finished and semi-finished goods, which are generally carried by container.

Container transport is of special importance for the Port of Hamburg. Incoming and outgoing container consignments are increasingly being handled by inland waterway vessel. The number of containers carried in hinterland transport in 2008 rose by 29 percent to 119,000 TEUs (twenty-foot standard containers). This is a success for the companies involved and for the numerous inland ports along the Elbe and the north German canal network. Container shipments within the Port of Hamburg region are also increasingly being carried between the various terminals by inland waterway vessel.

If in the summer months low water levels on the Middle and Upper Elbe present a barrier to inland waterway shipping, lorry transport steps in as a substitute. In September 2008, for example, the Elbe at Magdeburg was lower than 70 cm in places as a result of the failure to carry out necessary maintenance measures.

"In spite of everything, internal waterway transport at the Port of Hamburg has managed to expand its share of the market in 2008. This shows that the Port and the transport industry are going in the right direction, with a view to making hinterland transport environmentally friendly. Adequate and reliable shipping conditions on the inland waterway network are an essential basis for the continuation of this development," explained Sebastian Doderer of Hafen Hamburg Marketing. Doderer is investigating the optimization potential of inland waterway shipping at Germany's biggest seaport under the auspices of the Binnen Land research project.

(www.portofhamburg.com)

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