Rotterdam loosens up: lasher walkout paused, terminals race to clear the pile-up

Just after dawn, Rotterdam felt different. The lashers — the crews who climb up and lock stacks of boxes in place — agreed to pause their strike for five days while wage talks restart. Cranes are moving again. But it’s not a light switch. The city’s giant container terminals are still working through missed berth windows, ships that slipped out of sequence, and a yard that’s fuller than planners like to admit.
Operators have thrown on night shifts and triage rules: reefers first, dangerous goods, auto parts, then everything else. Truckers report gate times still longer than normal, and forwarders are warning customers about possible roll-overs for export boxes that arrive too close to cutoff. One dispatcher put it bluntly: “It’s not chaos; it’s a clean slowdown — and that spreads everywhere.”
What shippers should do (today):
-
Advance export cutoffs by a few hours where you can.
-
Route time-critical flows via Antwerp or Bremerhaven until yard density drops.
-
Ask carriers for temporary tolerance on demurrage/no-show penalties while the backlog clears.
If talks go sideways, expect the congestion to reappear fast — along with temporary congestion surcharges and a handful of blank sailings to re-sync Asia–Europe loops. For now, the message is simple: Rotterdam is breathing again, but not yet at full lung capacity.
The post Rotterdam loosens up: lasher walkout paused, terminals race to clear the pile-up appeared first on The Logistic News.
Share this post
Related
Posts
Rotterdam loosens up: lasher walkout paused, terminals race to clear the pile-up
Just after dawn, Rotterdam felt different. The lashers — the crews who climb up and lock stacks of boxes in...
Europe’s Roads Under Pressure as Fuel Costs Surge Again
Europe’s Roads Under Pressure as Fuel Costs Surge Again
The signs were subtle at first — longer queues at...U.S. Container Imports Slide in September as Tariff Fears Creep Back
On the East Coast docks last week, the stacks looked a little thinner. The September numbers confirm it: U.S. containerized...
Rotterdam Slows as Dockworkers Walk Out
At dawn on Thursday, ships lined the approaches to Rotterdam. Some had been waiting overnight, their lights flickering in the...