16.9 C
Hamburg
Sunday, May 18, 2025
Home News Heineken supports low carbon transport

Heineken supports low carbon transport

Heineken’s announcement:

We are innovating a low carbon transport route with our partners in the Netherlands.

We believe that low carbon transport is essential to securing our sustainable, globally competitive position. As part of our commitment to reduce emissions, we are working to make transportation of goods cleaner and more efficient.

Every year in the Netherlands, some 45,000 containers of beer are transported from our brewery in Zoeterwoude to the port of Rotterdam, where they continue on their journey to the rest of the world. Supplies also make their way back upstream to the brewery. It is an important route involving many stakeholders and, now, some 20 partners have united behind the ambition of making it carbon neutral.

For the first leg of the journey between our brewery and the inland waterway terminal, we are planning for all current trucks to run on renewable fuels while we develop long-term methods of electrical or carbon-neutral transport. The Alpherium, our inland shipping terminal where products are first loaded onto ships, will run on sustainable energy. Here, we will provide the infrastructure to enable ships to run on renewable fuels. We will use existing ships that run partly on renewable fuel sources and we will invest in new ships with fully electrical propulsion systems.

As the ships make their way along the route, we look closely at the surrounding environment at how we can make improvements to the canal route to add to the landscape and biodiversity. We are also looking at carbon-neutral ways to operate bridges and locks along the way.

Finally, when our containers reach the port of Rotterdam, we will provide the infrastructure to supply sustainable energy to equipment and ships. Digital techniques ensure goods flow efficiently, for example ensuring all containers return full so we do not waste empty miles. This requires a new level of cooperation with companies that import goods, supported by a new carbon neutral distribution centre next to the Alpherium.

And so the green corridor is created; a carbon neutral, economically sustainable solution that can be used by many different transporters and shippers and that can be applied to other routes. The project involves a complex programme of research, innovation and possibly new legislation to succeed, supported by cooperation between government, business and research institutes.

Right now we are running a “supplier collaboration programme” with Alpherium. The main goal is to remove non- value-adding costs in our processes. The next step is to define how the cost reductions can be used to fund sustainable alternatives. In the second half of 2018, our new inland barge, the Gouwenaar III, will be ready to operate. The whole project is an exciting prospect. Watch this space!





Latest Posts

Hapag-Lloyd applies GRI on Pakistan–Middle East trade lanes

Hapag-Lloyd has announced a General Rate Increase (GRI) from Pakistan to the Arabian Gulf, Saudi Arabia (Eastern and Western Provinces), Jordan and Yemen, and...

Wan Hai Lines debuts new Vietnam–Thailand–India direct route

Wan Hai Lines has announced a new direct service, the Tamil Nadu–Thailand Express (TTX) service, with the first vessel arriving at India's Chennai and...

Red Sea Eases, but Carriers Wary as Suez Canal Pushes for Return

As the haze begins to lift over the troubled waters of the Red Sea, the Suez Canal Authority (SCA) is carefully balancing reassurance with...

MSC and ZIM downsize joint Far East-US East Coast service network

In response to the recent changes in demand for cargo transport from Asia to the United States, MSC and ZIM have decided to adjust...

US sanctions target Iran-China oil trade, stirring waves across global shipping

As Washington ramps up its campaign to stifle Iranian oil revenues, a new chapter is unfolding in the ongoing tensions between the United States,...
error: Content is protected !!