REQUEST THE MAGAZINE

Magazine for ports, shipping and logistics

Heim takes the helm at Seaports of Niedersachsen

OLDENBURG. On 1 June André Heim was appointed new managing director of the Seaports of Lower Saxony. He replaces Timo Schön, who left the port marketing company at his own request on 31 May. Heim had been responsible for marketing and communications at Seaports since November 2013, working closely with the management. Prior to that, he worked for five years at the JadeWeserPort implementation company in Wilhelmshaven as marketing manager. “I am looking forward to this new challenge and to the confidence placed in me by the supervisory board,” says Heim. “Together with the Seaports team, I aim to uphold the interests of our nine seaports in Lower Saxony. A new focus will be the digital development of the Seaports of Lower Saxony umbrella brand for the worldwide marketing of the seaports.”

Photo: Privat

More articles from the category News & People

Joint Agenda for Port Investments

Joint Agenda for Port Investments

BREMEN. The Weser Day 2025, which took place in late September, focussed on the joint investment agenda under the guiding theme of “Investments in Bremen and Lower Saxony’s seaports – cooperation between the public and private sectors”.

read more
Successful first six months

Successful first six months

BREMEN. The ports of Bremen were able to increase total seaborne cargo transshipment by 5.3 per cent to 32.6 million tonnes during the first six months of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024.

read more
Joint Agenda for Port Investments

Joint Agenda for Port Investments

BREMEN. The Weser Day 2025, which took place in late September, focussed on the joint investment agenda under the guiding theme of “Investments in Bremen and Lower Saxony’s seaports – cooperation between the public and private sectors”.

read more
Successful first six months

Successful first six months

BREMEN. The ports of Bremen were able to increase total seaborne cargo transshipment by 5.3 per cent to 32.6 million tonnes during the first six months of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024.

read more