SWZ|Maritime’s April issue focuses on inland shipping in view of the Maritime Industry exhibition in May, the most important inland shipping event in the Netherlands. In Europe, inland shipping may not be the most important transport mode, but it is in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland and France. Inland navigation has always been known as the environmentally friendly alternative to road transport, but thanks to increasingly cleaner engines for trucks and shorter depreciation periods, the energy transition is now going faster there than in inland navigation. With a few exceptions, inland navigation still uses diesel almost exclusively in internal combustion engines. And if politicians and the government have declared war on fossil fuels that threaten the climate, then you as a skipper have a problem. While the large container companies continue to receive millions, inland navigation continues to fight for market share in competition with rail and road transport. But one thing is certain: inland navigation must also become greener. The only question is which fuel is most suitable – hydrogen, bio-LNG, methanol, whether or not in combination with batteries – and who will pay for this energy transition. In the meantime, there is plenty of experimentation going on with more climate-friendly ships. Also read: SWZ|Maritime’s March 2022 issue: EU shipbuilding gets lost in naivety

A lot is happening in inland navigation

At a major inland shipping conference organised by the Central Commission for the Navigation of the Rhine (CCNR) on 10 and 11 February this year, Bas Joorman, inland shipping product manager at Lloyd’s Register, gave an up-to-date overview of all the projects for hydrogen-powered ships: The conversion of the dry cargo ship MSC Maas, the new 135-metre long dry cargo ship Antonie, the conversion of the tanker Volendam, the new training ship for STC, a new ship for the Port of Amsterdam, the construction of an 86-metre-long bunker ship, a 135-metre-long container ship and the conversion of yet another bunker ship. Quite an impressive list. But there are many more interesting things happening in the inland shipping sector and who better to report on them than our fellow editor and former Schuttevaer board member Martin van Dijk who was responsible for writing this inland shipping special. This is editor-in-chief Antoon Oosting’s editorial accompanying the April 2022 issue. Our apologies to our English-speaking readers for writing this April issue mainly in Dutch. Although the CCNR publishes in French, English, German and Dutch, inland navigation has so many Dutch stakeholders that we address them in their native language. But don’t forget the interesting articles in English. Also read: SWZ|Maritime’s February 2022 issue: Offshore technology – The Dutch are ready to lead the way

The articles in SWZ|Maritime’s April issue

In addition to the regular sections such as Dutch news, Markets, Maritime monthly, Global news, Book reviews, and Mars Report, the articles (some in Dutch) in the April issue are:
  • Opleidingsschip Ab Initio is klaar voor de toekomst
  • Parsifal inland tanker deliveries are on schedule
  • PortLiner’s story continues
  • A-Rosa first to sail with a four-deck river cruiser
  • Novel inland waterway transport concepts
  • Crash barriers at sea to protect wind farms
  • New hospital ship gears up for medical campaigns in Africa
  • Alternatieve brandstoffen voor dieselmotoren
  • Hbo en mbo belangrijk voor maritiem onderzoek
  • Advantages and challenges of very fast hydrofoils
Picture: With the Blue Marjan, Concordia Damen delivered the first of forty Parsifal tankers for Shell. The ship is named after Marjan van Loon, managing director of Shell Netherlands (photo Maritime Filming Group and SWZ|Maritime’s April cover picture).