Port of Antwerp-Bruges ends 2025 with resilience in a turbulent trading climate
United States becomes largest trade partner despite import tariffs
Geopolitical tensions, economic uncertainty, and industrial action weighed on the activities of Port of Antwerp-Bruges in 2025. Total throughput declined but remains broadly in line with previous years. Container traffic remained stable, confirming the port’s role as a logistics hub and underlining the need for additional capacity. In 2026, Port of Antwerp-Bruges will continue to focus on infrastructure, transition and safety as the foundations for long-term sustainable growth.
Lower throughput, stable container traffic
Against this backdrop, Port of Antwerp-Bruges ended 2025 with total maritime throughput of 266.5 million tonnes, a 4.1% decline compared with 2024, but broadly in line with previous years. The port remains a strong import–export hub, but in 2025 most cargo types reflected a shift towards a higher share of imports.
Container throughput remained almost stable, with slight growth of 0.4% in tonnage and 0.7% in TEU. Market share in the Hamburg–Le Havre Range fell by 1.2 percentage points to 29.3% in the first nine months, partly as a result of ongoing congestion. This confirms the urgency of projects such as Extra Container Capacity Antwerp (ECA).
Liquid bulk saw a sharp decline due to a drop in oil products (-19%). This decline is mainly due to lower gasoline exports to West Africa and reduced diesel imports. Pressure on the European chemicals sector also continues.
Conventional general cargo ended the year with a 1.6% increase, supported by strong volumes in the fourth quarter. Throughput of iron and steel fell by 1.7%, while other conventional general cargo flows increased by a combined 14.4%. RoRo throughput rose by 3%, driven by growth in trucks, heavy equipment and used cars. Dry bulk fell by 12.1%, mainly due to lower volumes of fertilizers, coal and sand.
In total, 20,236 seagoing vessels visited the port (+0.2%). The number of cruise ships fell to 166, carrying 466,089 passengers.
2026: safety, transition and infrastructure as priorities
In 2026, the focus remains on safety, transition, and infrastructure, with due attention to economic realities. The European industry is under heavy pressure due to high energy prices and an uncertain investment climate. Targeted support from authorities remains essential to prevent relocation and to enable investment in industrial renewal and decarbonisation.
Safety remains a strategic core mission, with investments in physical and digital security, cyber resilience, and the fight against organised crime. Furthermore, Port of Antwerp-Bruges is reinforcing its role as a transition hub. Projects on circularity, low carbon molecules and collective CO₂ infrastructure will take further shape in 2026, including in the NextGen District.
Finally, 2026 will be an important year for major infrastructure projects for which the Flemish Government confirmed investments in 2025, including the ECA and the New Zeebrugge Lock. Despite the challenges, Port of Antwerp-Bruges continues to create a sustainable and competitive future as a global port.
Jacques Vandermeiren, CEO of Port of Antwerp-Bruges: “2025 highlighted how strongly geopolitical and economic developments impact the operations of a global port like Port of Antwerp-Bruges. Tensions between the US, China and Europe, the war in Ukraine, congestion and industrial action had a clear impact. Total transhipment fell slightly. We remain a strong import-export hub, but in 2025 we saw a shift towards a larger share of imports in most traffic flows. The stability of container traffic following a strong 2024 confirms our strategic role in the European logistics chain, while also highlighting the need for additional capacity. Only close collaboration with port companies, other ports, and authorities will enable us to continue to grow competitively, safely, and with a future-focused approach.”
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