Klaipėda, Aug. 13, 2025 — The morning was damp, the kind that seeps into your sleeves. Down by the quay, the steady growl of truck engines carried through the fog. Each rig was loaded high with wheat, the canvas tarps pulled tight against the drizzle.
From the bridge of a waiting bulk carrier, the crew leaned over the rail, watching dockside cranes swing into motion. The grabs plunged into the holds, coming up with half a ton of grain each time, a fine dust trailing into the air.
Port managers say they’ve tightened the schedule for grain convoys this season. Instead of a slow, all-day trickle of arrivals, the trucks now roll in together, in carefully timed bursts. “It’s like a sprint,” said one harbor dispatcher, “and when it’s over, the yard feels almost empty.”
The method has its benefits — ships get loaded faster, and captains can catch favorable weather in the Baltic without losing a day at anchor. But there’s a flip side: if a convoy is delayed by weather or traffic inland, the entire loading sequence stalls.
For now, the new rhythm is holding. The fog lifts, the trucks roll in, and another ship pulls away from the pier, bound for mills across Europe.