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Toespraak van minister Van Nieuwenhuizen bij Maritime Seminar
Omschrijving
Toespraak van minister Van Nieuwenhuizen in haar keynote speech 'Towards sustainable and smart port development'. Zij hield deze speech tijdens het Maritime Seminar in Soerabaja, Indonesië, op 12 maart 2020. De tekst is alleen in het Engels beschikbaar.
Verantwoordelijke | Ministerie van Infrastructuur en Waterstaat |
---|---|
Thema | Scheepvaart |
Documentsoort | Toespraak |
Publicatiedatum | 12-03-2020 |
Documentdatum | 12-03-2020 |
Onderwerp | Scheepvaart en havens |
Ladies and gentlemen,
It’s an honour to be giving the keynote speech at this seminar today.
This is the 4th day of our visit to your beautiful country, and I’d like to start
by thanking you for your generous hospitality.
We arrived in Jakarta on Monday, and yesterday afternoon we came to Surabaya.
- In these past few days, I’ve been treated to some of your country’s cultural and culinary highlights, spoken to many people, and seen that Indonesia is engaging with the same issues as the Netherlands, like:
- climate change and its impact;
- rising sea levels;
- fresh water supply;
- plastic and waste management; and
- digitalisation.
Although Indonesia and the Netherlands are not neighbours, we have much in common,
and I see many good reasons and opportunities for productive cooperation.
This morning we’re talking about Maritime Connectivity & Smart Solutions – a very
important subject in a country like Indonesia.
This is the world’s largest island nation, made up of more than 16 thousand islands,
home to more than 260 million Indonesians. Its coastline stretches over 55 thousand
kilometres and has 1,900 seaports.
Your seaports are hubs, portals of immense value to the Indonesian economy. They connect
your 16 thousand islands with each other, and your country with the rest of the world.
But your ports are also essential in connecting Indonesian society. The sea is our
friend, and must not be allowed to drive a wedge between the thousands of islands
that form your beautiful country.
And that’s why you’re right to have ambitious aims for sustainable and smart port
development. Right to be modernising existing ports, and constructing new ones.
This is a major ambition, with global significance. A programme that calls for global
cooperation.
In constructing ports, we need to take account of coastal protection and ecological
systems. You face the same challenges as the Netherlands. Indonesia is very rightly
investing in port infrastructure, IT and smart logistics. In connections with the
hinterland and in improving waterways and ships.
Apart from modernising infrastructure, you are also focusing on your shipping fleet.
Shipbuilding and maintenance present major opportunities. And there is also demand
for maritime education to modernise and professionalise the sector.
I know, with 500 kilometres of coastline and 17 seaports, the Netherlands is slightly
smaller than Indonesia. Nonetheless, it’s worth looking at the opportunities that
working together offers.
Like in Indonesia, a large part of our economy depends on our strategic location on
the sea. The waters of our seaports keep our economy afloat. The estuaries of the
rivers Maas, Rhine and Scheldt are Europe’s gateways to the rest of the world.
The Dutch maritime cluster has knowledge and expertise in the field of inland shipping,
ports, offshore industries, fisheries, education, shipbuilding and maritime suppliers.
We export this knowledge and expertise to countries all over the world.
And we’re cooperating: Royal IHC is building ships in Batam. Damen Shipyards builds
marine vessels together with PT Pal here in Surabaya.
We’re sharing and multiplying maritime expertise and knowledge.
In 2016 Indonesia and the Netherlands signed a Memorandum of Understanding on Maritime
Cooperation and we’ve been working together under its flag ever since. With good reason.
Knowledge sharing is a major component of this partnership.
Like during the working visits of KADIN to the Port of Rotterdam and Royal IHC. The
Indonesian/Dutch partnerships with Royal HaskoningDHV, Witteveen+Bos developing new
sea ports in Indonesia. Or the way Port of Rotterdam is involved in the new ‘Green
Port’ concept in Kuala Tanjung.
Every year we hold a Bilateral Maritime Forum. In the Netherlands and Indonesia alternately.
At this forum, we look at ways we can help each other in areas like port development,
shipbuilding, education and improving intermodal transport on and between Indonesia’s
islands. This year’s forum will be held in The Hague in September.
But today, ladies and gentlemen, we’re in Surabaya.
The subject of this morning’s panel discussion was port digitalisation. Of all maritime
issues and challenges, port digitalisation is one of the most crucial. Ports can be
either accelerators or bottlenecks in the maritime infrastructure.
If we want them to be accelerators, we not only need a robust physical infrastructure.
Investment in technological innovation is also essential.
Digitalising the port system. That’s the future. And it makes sense. Because digitalisation
is also happening in the rest of our global society.
The opportunities it presents are clear: an interactive system to monitor and manage
all port activities, with full control over the entire logistics industry. If port
infrastructure is digitalised properly, efficiency, safety and cost-effectiveness
will go hand in hand. A major transition, in which the Dutch ports are now fully engaged.
It’s a transition we need to see in the global context of other trends and developments
that impact on the maritime cluster. Economic and demographic trends, climate change,
changing energy consumption and technological innovation, for example.
These changes pose challenges and present opportunities for the maritime cluster,
like access to new markets and trade partners. I see scope for successful partnerships
between government bodies, businesses and knowledge institutions that will help maintain
our leading position.
This seminar is about exploiting these opportunities. About strengthening maritime
connectivity within the island nation that is Indonesia and improving the entire infrastructure.
It’s about cooperation to help Indonesia achieve its rightful ambition of becoming
a maritime power.
Because – given the size and location of your country – it’s more than logical that
international shipping should make full use of your maritime services – for modification,
repairs and maintenance.
The Port of Rotterdam will discuss this subject at length during one of the sessions.
Projects are already under way.
The Netherlands is also focusing on making transport – and shipping in particular
– greener and more sustainable. This is the global commitment we signed up to in Paris.
I think we should share as much knowledge and experience as we can.
By developing new ships which can carry out greener, more sustainable transport operations.
We’ll not only improve transport flows, but also contribute to a cleaner environment.
Ladies and gentlemen,
The 21st century is a century of major change. Digital technology, climate, energy
and raw materials. This is the century in which we abandon established patterns, and
shape a new, sustainable, digital future. We share a joint, global responsibility.
I believe in international cooperation. And that’s why I want to work with you and
explore our joint maritime opportunities.
Under the flag of Partners for International Business, Dutch-Indonesian partnerships
are taking shape. We’re getting ever closer partners.
Letters of Intent are being signed during this visit by your university of technology
ITS and Dutch Partners for International Business in the shipbuilding sector, like
Damen.
Pelindo III and the Port of Rotterdam have signed an MoU on sharing knowledge on port
digitalisation. The first results of a joint study will be presented today.
We’ve also talked this week about the conditions under which Dutch companies can contribute
to achieving Indonesia’s maritime ambitions.
We’ve taken major steps forward. Towards a joint future.
And with this seminar today, you will be making a significant contribution.
I hope the rest of your discussions will be productive.
Thank you.