MONTREAL: The announcement was made jointly by both port authorities during the visit by Jean D’Amour, the Quebec minister for Transport and Implementation of Maritime Strategy. The collaboration agreement was originally signed between Antwerp and Montreal, Quebec’s largest port, in 2013. This agreement runs until the spring of 2016, but the parties have now decided to extend it for another three years.
It is hardly surprising that the two ports get on so well together, as there are many similarities between them. Both are located deep inland on a major river, and both serve a vast hinterland covering many provinces and indeed entire countries with huge purchasing power and major concentrations of industry. Furthermore, Canada as part of North America is one of the main “foreland” partners of Antwerp. In 2014 the total volume of freight carried between Antwerp and Canada was 4.5 million tonnes. The upcoming implementation of the trade agreement between the EU and Canada – the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) due to be ratified in 2016 – should give a major boost to this trade in the next few years.