By Maria Kalamatas | July 24, 2025
Section: International / Maritime & Port Operations
Hamburg, July 24 — Global shipping companies are preparing for possible delays at Germany’s major ports as dockworkers at Hamburg, Bremerhaven, and Wilhelmshaven plan coordinated strike actions over wage disputes, threatening to disrupt European cargo flows during peak season.
“Every contingency plan is being activated,” said Jens Bauer, operations director at a Scandinavian logistics group. “Our vessels can reroute, but the ripple effects on inland distribution and schedules will be significant.”
Labor standoff escalates
The strikes follow stalled negotiations between dockworkers’ unions and port operators over pay adjustments linked to inflation and longer work shifts. Port authorities warn that a prolonged shutdown could slow handling for thousands of containers daily.
“Imports, exports, and transshipments are all on the line,” Bauer noted. “This isn’t just a local disruption — it’s a regional one.”
Contingency routes explored
Carriers are already rerouting some vessels toward Antwerp, Rotterdam, and Gdansk to minimize bottlenecks. However, shifting cargo adds cost and delays for time-sensitive shipments, particularly retail and manufacturing goods bound for inland Europe.
“Rerouting is a costly solution, but we can’t afford cargo standstills,” Bauer said.
What’s next
Union leaders have signaled that strikes could escalate into rolling stoppages if talks fail by the end of the week. Analysts warn that even a few days of disruption could back up cargo flows for weeks.