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Rotterdam Bets on Wind Power to Keep Food and Pharma Cold

Rotterdam Bets on Wind Power to Keep Food and Pharma Cold

The Logistic News by The Logistic News
August 29, 2025
in EchoChain, Logistic
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Rotterdam Bets on Wind Power to Keep Food and Pharma Cold
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By Maria Kalamatas — August 29, 2025

ROTTERDAM — August 29, 2025. At the edge of Europe’s busiest port, where container stacks rise like steel towers, a different kind of structure is taking shape: a vast cold storage facility that will run entirely on wind power. Workers in orange vests moved between turbines and construction cranes this morning, setting the stage for what port officials say will be the largest onshore wind-powered cold store in Europe.

The site is designed to keep fruit, vegetables, meat, and pharmaceuticals chilled without drawing a single kilowatt from fossil fuels. Instead, it will lean on the sprawling wind farms that line the North Sea coast.

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“Cold storage is one of the biggest energy guzzlers in logistics,” admitted Hendrik Vos, an engineer supervising the build. “If we can prove it works here, it can work anywhere.”


Why it matters

Ports are under pressure to cut their carbon footprint. Refrigerated warehouses, which often run 24/7, account for a disproportionate share of emissions. By coupling the facility directly to renewable energy, Rotterdam is trying to show that sustainability and scale are not mutually exclusive.


For shippers and exporters

The cold store will serve everything from South American bananas to Dutch pharmaceuticals destined for Asia. For exporters, the facility promises not only a greener footprint but also more predictable costs, since it is less tied to volatile gas or oil prices.

“It’s not just about emissions,” said Eva de Jong, who exports dairy to the Middle East. “If power prices jump, we usually pay the bill. A wind-fed system smooths that risk.”


Challenges ahead

Relying solely on wind is not without complications. Storage batteries will need to balance supply on days when the North Sea is calm. Engineers are testing backup systems, but the ambition remains to keep the operation fossil-free year-round.


Outlook

The project is slated to open in mid-2026. If successful, it could become a blueprint for ports worldwide, where refrigerated logistics is both essential and energy-hungry.

Standing near the turbines, Vos summed it up plainly: “We move goods across oceans. The least we can do is stop burning fuel just to keep them cold.”

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