Europe | Bombs and balance sheets

Germany’s waterways are unsung, but essential

River freight is hard to beat

The passenger ferry Rheinnixe stops its operation due to low water in the Rhine in Bonn, Germany, August 16, 2022. REUTERS/Benjamin Westhoff
|COLOGNE

Roughly a third of Germany’s coal, crude oil and natural gas—as well as a big chunk of its grains and chemicals—travel along inland waterways of one type or another. Traffic on the Rhine, which twists from the Swiss Alps to the North Sea, accounts for about 80% of that. Hence the continuing concern about the sizzling conditions which, over several weeks, have threatened to bring shipping on the river to a halt. The water level near Kaub, a town close to the Rhine’s shallowest section, has lately hovered at only about 30cm (see chart). It is going to take a lot of rain, falling in the right places, to push that up very much. To decrease their draughts, barges are carrying only 15-25% of their usual loads. Germany’s most important waterway could yet shut.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Bombs and balance sheets”

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