14 de jul. de 2012

Port of Rotterdam Maasvlakte 2: The leadership for the future.


This incredible dutch people!
Maasvlakte 2 is a huge Port of Rotterdam expansion for the future 50 years. Dutch people are reconized by their focus and determination, specially when the matter is dredging and ports management.

For decades, Rotterdam has been establishing benchmarks for the rest of the world and created standards of quality, productivity indicators and figures to drive port authorities and nationals maritime policies.

I hope this notice below may wake up portuary policy-makers around the world, specially in my country Brazil, to learn how an efficient planning and stable port authority can change the economy and welfare of one people. The Netherlands are the best exemple!

Queen Beatrix closes the Maasvlakte 2 seawall
From July,11th 2012, the Dutch coastline will be permanently different. Queen Beatrix gave the sign for the closure of the seawall of Maasvlakte 2. At slack water, when there was minimal current, the large equipment of contractors Boskalis and Van Oord closed the gap in the eleven-kilometre long seawall.

Queen Beatrix of Holland gives the signal to start seawall´s construction closure operations.
Hans Smits, President and CEO of the Port of Rotterdam Authority: "After 3.5 years of hard work, today we reached a major milestone. The seawall around Maasvlakte 2 has been closed and these 2,000 hectares of new Netherlands are properly protected against the sea."
At the end of 2008, the Port of Rotterdam Authority commenced construction of Maasvlakte 2, the land reclamation project in the North Sea for the development of the port of Rotterdam. 
The construction of the new port area is on schedule, and the first container terminals will be operational in 2014. This project changes the map of the Netherlands. The port of Rotterdam grows by 20%, the Netherlands becomes 2,000 hectares larger, and the coastline is 3.5 km further in the sea.
Seawall
That new coastline is now approaching its completion. Its construction took place from two sides over the past years. On the northern side, alongside the navigation channel to the port, 3.5 km of hard seawall was built. The construction is unique in the Netherlands due to the stony dune in combination with a block dam for which almost 20,000 concrete blocks from the seawall of the existing Maasvlakte were reused. 

On the south side, a soft seawall of 7.5 km was built, made up of beach with dunes of 14 metres high. The dune has been planted along its entire length with marram grass. The beach on the south side has been widened by 100 metres so that beachgoers can enjoy a lovely wide beach at high tide as well. Today the gap between these two sections was closed.


The Maasvlakte 2 project becomes a reality.
Closure 
Since the middle of June, the trailing suction hopper dredgers Prins der Nederlanden and Vox Máxima and the cutter suction dredger Edax have been bringing the last 10 million cubic metres of sand to the missing section of seawall between the sand and the stony dune. 

Today the three dredgers are joining forces to connect the northern and southern sections of the outer contour. This first large sand closure since the construction of the Philipsdam 25 years ago is an impressive exploit of the hydraulic engineering contractors Boskalis and Van Oord, united in PUMA (Projectorganisatie Uitbreiding Maasvlakte).


Pride of Holland 
The construction of Maasvlakte 2 is a part of the Pride of Holland. The two large Dutch hydraulic engineering companies Boskalis and Van Oord constructed this new land in a very short time. The new area is expected to enable the activities in the port of Rotterdam to continue to grow, certainly in the coming 20 to 25 years. That is good for international trade, good for the position of Rotterdam as the gateway to Europe and good for employment.

Source: Port of Rotterdam official site and blogger opinions.