HAMBURG - Low water levels on the Rhine and Danube in Germany mean cargo vessels cannot sail fully loaded on the German sections of both rivers, traders said on Monday. Dry weather in recent days had caused river levels to drop further, they said. Water levels have been unusually low since early August. The Rhine is too shallow to allow vessels to sail with full loads south of Cologne and Duisburg, traders said. The Danube is also too low for ships to sail with full loads along the entire German section of the river, they said. Low water means vessel operators impose surcharges on freight rates, increasing costs for cargo owners. More vessels are needed to transport cargo, also increasing costs. The Rhine is an important shipping route for commodities including grains, minerals, coal and oil products such as heating oil. The Danube is an important route for heating oil and for eastern European grain exports to western Europe.
An aerial picture shows a ferry over Europe's most frequented waterway the river Rhine in Mondorf, a suburb of the North Rhine-Westphalian city of Bonn, Germany May 6, 2015. Reuters/Wolfgang Rattay
An aerial picture shows a ferry over Europe’s most frequented waterway the river Rhine in Mondorf, a suburb of the North Rhine-Westphalian city of Bonn, Germany May 6, 2015. Reuters/Wolfgang Rattay