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Shipping Disruption Continues as Rhine Water Levels Drop Again in Germany

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

August 12, 2022

Credit: Björn Wylezich/AdobeStock

Credit: Björn Wylezich/AdobeStock

Water levels on the river Rhine in Germany have fallen again in dry weather on Friday, with some vessels no longer able to sail, shipping operators and brokers said.

Rhine cargo shipping continues, but with vessels sometimes forced to sail three-quarters empty with cargo owners often needing to pay for four vessels to transport their loads instead of one.

Economists estimate Rhine disruption could knock half a percentage point off Germany's economic growth this year.  

The reference waterline level at the chokepoint of Kaub near Koblenz was at 42 centimetres on Friday, down about 5 centimetres on the day and down from 51 centimetres on Monday. Vessels need about 1.5 metres of Kaub reference waterline to sail fully loaded.

There is no specific level at which shipping stops, said Roberto Spranzi, director of the DTG shipping cooperative which operates about 100 cargo vessels on the Rhine. "We are continuing to sail today and we will continue sailing until we reach the nautical technical impossibility."

Some larger vessels and barges can no longer pass Kaub and in Duisburg, the large pusher-tug/barge units which in normal times carry 3,000 tonnes a barge can no longer operate, he said.

Loads are being transferred to larger numbers of smaller canal barges able to operate in the shallow water, increasing costs for cargo owners.

"Customers are only ordering the supplies they really need to keep production going," he said.

Spot prices for a liquid tanker barge from Rotterdam to Karlsruhe south of Kaub were unchanged on the day at about 110 euros a tonne on Friday, but up 16 euros this week and up from only around 20 euros a tonne in June, brokers said.

Low Rhine water will hit output at two German coal-fired power stations. 

Chemicals group BASF said it could not rule out production cuts if low water disrupts logistics. Read full story

(Reporting by Michael Hogan, editing by David Evans)

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