Port of Antwerp‑Bruges closed 2025 with throughput slightly lower amid geopolitical tensions, economic uncertainty and industrial action, yet overall volumes remained broadly consistent with recent years and container traffic held stable — even as the United States emerged as the port's largest trade partner despite ongoing import tariffs.
2025 for Port of Antwerp-Bruges was marked by geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty. The war in Ukraine, trade conflicts between the United States, Europe and China, and volatile global trade coincided with prolonged congestion at container terminals and an unprecedented level of industrial action.
The port noted that unexpectedly, the United States emerged as the largest trade partner, accounting for 31.3 million tonnes of throughput, supported by higher LNG imports. Traffic fluctuated strongly throughout the year, partly due to anticipation of import duties and a decline from the second quarter onwards. Higher US tariffs had a dampening effect on exports of iron, steel and cars, among others.
At the same time, container imports from China increased by 3.8%, further widening the imbalance in container flows with the Far East. China was already the main country of origin for containers and became the leading origin for cars in 2025.
In Zeebrugge, the European ban on transshipment of Russian LNG to non-EU destinations negatively impacted energy volumes. However, expanding LNG production capacity in the US and Middle East may support future growth.
Operationally, the logistics chain was also under pressure.
Port of Antwerp-Bruges said between January and July, disrupted sailing schedules, rerouted cargo, and the simultaneous phasing out of previous container alliances and start-up of new alliances added extra pressure to container logistics.
Additionally, around 25 days of industrial action disrupted all cargo segments, resulting in an estimated total loss of 2.4 million tonnes, equivalent to about 1% of annual throughput.
Lower throughput, stable container traffic