REQUEST THE MAGAZINE

Magazine for ports, shipping and logistics

UECC with a new weekly line service from Cuxhaven

Cuxhaven, 21st October 2021 | The Norwegian shipping company UECC added Cuxhaven to its Baltic Service at the beginning of October.

In the deep sea port at the mouth of the Elbe, various imports from Russia and Finland are unloaded and loaded into the European hinterland. In addition, there are regular transports from UECC from Cuxhaven to the United Kingdom and other network ports of the shipping company, such as Zeebrugge.

Managing Director and Deputy Chairman of the HWG, Arne Ehlers, adds: “Ports must make their contribution to protect the climate and environment. We therefore strive to continuously develop the Cuxhaven location in terms of technology and sustainability. We are very pleased about the new line service from Cuxhaven of UECC with their LNG-powered RoRo carriers.”

Further informations

Credits: Cuxport

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