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PRIVACY
Ports & Logistics

Big interview: Simon Bird on the economy, freeport status, hydrogen and ferry terminal progress

David Laister speaks to the Humber port director as the new year sees activity across several key fronts

Pictured last May, Prime Minister and then Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, right, with ABP Humber director and freeport steering board chair Simon Bird at Port of Immingham.(Image: GrimsbyLive/Donna Clifford)

Humber port director Simon Bird has started 2023 at full throttle, with three huge plans for major expansion progressing as the new year dawns.

Proposals for a significant terminal at Immingham to handle a key green hydrogen feedstock and import carbon for storage is entering its public consultation, as the neighbouring three-berth addition for Stena Line moves to the development consent order application stage.

The ABP team is also anticipating an imminent final approval of the business case for freeport status, having initially been the forerunner of now-Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s bold bid to counter any Brexit impact with a global trade boost. It comes against a recessionary backdrop that can often be felt first on the quaysides, with drop offs in demand for materials ranging from construction to fast moving consumer goods more evident earlier in the supply chain than in most pockets of the economy.

Read more: New ferry terminal will 'bring confidence to economy' with international trade investment

Mr Bird said: “We are all worried about the economy, the world economy, driven by what has happened and continues to happen in Ukraine, and the impact on the European markets; it is a volatile time.

“We’re just having some extraordinarily warm weather at the moment [said speaking in 13 degrees at noon on Immingham Container Terminal] with gas prices having been high, now there is lots of gas available and they are lower, which is good news for the consumer. The cost of living is clear though, people are unable to spend as much money as they have done previously, and all these factors make it a difficult year for the port sector, and economy generally. We need to manage day to day, keep our customer service levels where they need to be and keep looking at costs.”

While the now may be steady, long-term is looking strong.

Launching the innovative hydrogen-fuelled container handling plant trial, a forerunner to much grander plans with global industrial gases giant Air Products, he was looking forward to huge progress being made on the eastern wing of the port.