English

2026-03-05

Deurganckdock

EU Port Strategy recognises the crucial role of ports for the European economy

On 4 March, the European Commission presented its new EU Port Strategy. The strategy aims to strengthen European ports and focuses on competitiveness, security, investment and the role of ports in the energy transition. Port of Antwerp-Bruges welcomes the fact that the strategy explicitly recognises the central role of ports in the European economy and in addressing challenges such as strategic autonomy, energy supply and secure trade chains.

Ports as engines of industry and trade

The strategy confirms that ports are multifunctional industrial hubs and form a crucial link in European logistics and industrial value chains. Much industry is located in or around ports and is highly dependent on efficient import and export flows. For Port of Antwerp-Bruges, it is therefore important that European port policy closely aligns with broader European industrial policy.

Competitiveness and an open investment climate

Port of Antwerp-Bruges welcomes the fact that competitiveness is put forward as the first priority. At the same time, an attractive and open investment climate remains essential for the further development of ports. International investments play an important role today and in the future in port infrastructure and industrial activities. Security considerations must be taken seriously, but new European initiatives should not lead to increased regulatory pressure or gold-plating that would undermine the investment climate.

Ports as energy hubs

The strategy also highlights the role of ports as hubs for the energy transition. For Port of Antwerp-Bruges, this is particularly relevant. The announced initiatives to accelerate and simplify permitting procedures for strategic projects in ports could become an important lever to enable faster investments in energy, decarbonisation, port expansion and innovative projects.

Cooperation and investment

The focus on cooperation around port security aligns with initiatives already taken in Belgium to tackle organised crime in logistics chains. In addition, the strategy rightly emphasises the importance of European investment instruments such as the Connecting Europe Facility, which remain crucial for investments in infrastructure, energy transition, digitalisation and military mobility.

Jacques Vandermeiren, CEO Port of Antwerp-Bruges: “

The European port strategy is an important step forward because it recognises how crucial ports are for Europe’s economy, energy transition and strategic autonomy. At the same time, we must ensure that European ports and the industries located in them remain competitive in an increasingly challenging global environment. This requires strong synergy between European port, transport and industrial policy, with sufficient room for investment, innovation and international cooperation between European ports.

Johan Klaps, Alderman for the Port of Antwerp and Chairman of Port of Antwerp-Bruges: “

The new European port strategy confirms the strategic importance of our ports within the broader economic and industrial ecosystem. From the Board of Directors, we support the direction Europe is setting with this strategy, as it provides our sector with the framework needed for sustainable long-term growth. It is essential that ports are given the space to continue investing, innovating and strengthening their role as a resilient link in Europe’s future.

 

 

 


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About Port of Antwerp-Bruges

With an annual throughput of 267 million tonnes, Port of Antwerp-Bruges is a world port in the heart of Europe. The port is a unique ecosystem of maritime throughput, logistics and industry, and is home to Europe’s largest integrated chemical cluster. As a hub for containers, general cargo and vehicles, and home to over 1400 companies, it accounts for around 164,000 direct and indirect jobs and 21 billion euros in added value. This makes it Belgium’s most important economic engine.

Port of Antwerp-Bruges aims to become the first world port that reconciles economy, people and climate. The Antwerp-Bruges Port Authority, a limited liability company of public law, manages the port platforms of Antwerp and Zeebrugge. The cities of Antwerp and Bruges are the shareholders. Jacques Vandermeiren is CEO, Johan Klaps (Vice-Mayor of Antwerp) is President of the Board of Directors, and Dirk De fauw (Mayor of Bruges) is Vice-President.