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PRIVACY
Ports & Logistics

Welcome return to commercial use of Aire and Calder Navigation to link Hull and Leeds

Bulk-carrying barge marks start of what is hoped will be an increase in waterways traffic from Humber ports

MMS Off-Roader enters Ocean Lock at Goole. (Image: ABP)

A historic Yorkshire waterway is once again welcoming regular commercial traffic.

The 500-tonne capacity barge MMS Off-Roader has started using the historic Aire and Calder Navigation to transport marine aggregate from the city’s Albert Dock to Leeds. It follows significant investment from Hull maritime firm MMS Workboats, AC Marine Aggregates and the , and extensive trials.

Each trip is welcome news for those using the strategic road network too, eliminating up to 25 heavy goods vehicles from the A62 and M62. It is hoped more companies will follow the lead.

Read more: Largest vessel ever welcomed to the Humber as near 20-year record sunk

Regular commercial traffic has not used the route for more than a decade. The trip starts its journey at the port, using the Humber to head inland, with the vessel locking into the canal at Goole before heading to Knostrop, to the south of Leeds. From there the aggregates are distributed by land across the local building industry.

David Lowe, of the Commercial Boat Operators Association, said: “Commercial traffic is returning to the Aire and Calder Canal after a lot of hard work by a lot of people. Britain’s waterways are an underused part of the transport network, with an ability to deliver heavy goods in a quiet but efficient way that helps keep heavy lorries off the roads. The run of MMS Off-Roader is something to celebrate and is the largest vessel to reach central Leeds for 30 years.”

Another sustainable accolade for the MMS Off-Roader is that it has been repurposed. The vessel was originally a tanker named the Humber Princess, built in Hull in 1979. MMS’s skilled team, planned and delivered the conversion project, taking just short of a year.

Rob Langton, MMS’s managing director, said: “As a key part of the local marine industry MMS are very happy to get this ship underway with what we hope is the first of a regular trade for the building industry of West Yorkshire. It is a shipment that takes heavy goods vehicles off our pressurised road network, a win for logistics and the wider environment.”