Most important for the port of
Rotterdam is the
petrochemical industry and general
cargo transshipment handlings. The harbour functions as an important transit point for transport of
bulk and other goods between the European continent and other parts of the world. From Rotterdam goods are transported by ship, river barge, train or road. Since 2000 the
Betuweroute, a fast cargo
railway from Rotterdam to
Germany, has been under construction. The
Dutch part of this railway opened in 2007. Large
oil refineries are located west of the city. The rivers
Meuse (
Maas) and
Rhine also provide excellent access to the pan-European
hinterland.
24-metre draft The EECV-quay of the port has a
draft of 24 metres (78 feet). This made it one of only two available mooring locations for one of the largest bulk cargo ships in the world, the
iron ore bulk carrier MS Berge Stahl when it is fully loaded, along with the Terminal of
Ponta da Madeira in
Brazil, until the opening of a new deep-water iron ore wharf at
Caofeidian in China in 2011. The ship's draft of 23 meters (75 feet) leaves only 1 metre (3 feet) of
under keel clearance, therefore it can only dock in a restricted tidal window. Such ships must travel in the
Eurogeul waterway.
Robotic container operations Much of the container loading and stacking in the port is handled by autonomous robotic cranes and computer controlled chariots.
Europe Container Terminals, which operates two major container terminals at the port, pioneered the development of terminal automation. At the Delta terminal, the chariots—or
automated guided vehicles (AGV)—are unmanned and each carries one container. The chariots navigate their own way around the terminal with the help of a magnetic grid built into the terminal tarmac. Once a container is loaded onto an AGV, it is identified by
infrared "eyes" and delivered to its designated place within the terminal. This terminal is also named "the ghost terminal". Unmanned Automated Stacking Cranes (ASC) take containers to/from the AGVs and store them in the stacking yard. The newer Euromax terminal implements an evolution of this design that eliminates the use of
straddle carriers for the land-side operations.
Smart Technology The Port Authority at the Port of Rotterdam uses the
Internet of Things, a cloud-based platform, to collect and process data from sensors around the port. In May 2019, the port sent Container 42 out on a two-year data-collecting mission. ==Urban renewal in vacant port areas==