Recommendation Ship Tracker Container Tracker Ports Information Exclusive Research Enterprise Show Research Institute

Special tank transport in the port of Rotterdam

share to: Origin: Port of Rotterdam    Date: Jul 22, 2019

A remarkable transport by water in the port of Rotterdam: six tanks were transported this week by floating sheerlegs from the production hall where they were built to the terminal where they will soon be used for the storage of biofuels. Watch the video for an impression.

A thirty meter high tank hanging in the ridge of a floating sheerlegs. It was not an everyday sight, last Thursday and Friday on the water of the Nieuwe Waterweg. On these days, a total of six tanks travelled the route from tank builder SJR Group on Heijplaat to HES Botlek Tank Terminal (HBTT) in the Botlek harbour.

Fitting and measuring

A piece of logistics art, because along the way the necessary obstacles had to be overcome. It all started in the production hall where the tanks with a diameter of 12 metres were welded together over the past few months, says project leader Anne Vonk Noordegraaf of SJR Group. With a height of thirty metres, these tanks are quite up to scratch. They only just fitted through the doorway of our warehouse. With the construction for the transport around it, we had a few centimetres of room for manoeuvre. So fit and measure!

Floating sheerlegs

Road transport of such dangers is not an option, so the transport is by water. This is done with a ‘floating sheerlegs’, an extremely strong, floating crane, in this case the HEBO Lift-9. A bit of power is needed too, given the 110,000 kilograms that each tank weighs. After that it is one and a half hour sailing to the HES Botlek Tank Terminal. Here is another special vehicle: a Self-Propelled Modular Transporter (SPMT), a gigantic trailer supported by endless wheels. When they arrive at their final destination, a crawler crane lifts each tank onto the foundation, after which they can be connected.

140 Olympic swimming pools

With the six new tanks, HBTT expands its tank capacity by 20,000 cubic metres in one go. This will give us a total storage capacity of 510,000 cubic metres,’ says Coen Janssen of HBTT. By way of comparison, that’s about the capacity of some 140 Olympic swim.

Keywords:Port of Rotterdam Label:Port of Rotterdam

Previous: AAPA awards Port of Corpus Christi

Next post: Fremantle Port welcomes first of two giant container ships

Disclaimer:All the texts and pictures of the manuscripts with the source of “China Port Network” and “www.chinaports.com” are copyrighted by the China Port Network. If reprinted and used, it must also indicate the source of the manuscript and the author's information, and bear the corresponding legal responsibilities.
0comments
This article represents only the author's own point of view and has nothing to do with the site.