The symposium is part of a series of events in Rotterdam, celebrating the 150th birthday of the New Waterway, the intervention engineer Pieter Caland realized 150 years ago. His quest to transform delta into a shipping channel led to digging a waterway through the dunes of Hoek van Holland. As a result, Rotterdam has grown into a modern delta metropolis that is connected to Europe and the rest of the world. That was 150 years ago. Now we face new challenges. Challenges we like to tackle during the three-day symposium on the history and future of the New Waterway the LDE PortCity- Futures Centre organizes in the Netherlands.

History and Future of Shipping Channels
October 13 - 15, 2022
SS Rotterdam, Rotterdam
Background
Port cities worldwide have been able to develop in coastal landscapes such as deltas, estuaries, and lagoons. This development was accompanied by radical transformations of these coastal landscapes through land reclamation, diking and canalization. The construction and systematic deepening of shipping channels in particular play a key role in this, with the New Waterway as an illustrative example.
These coastal landscapes are the scene of increasing tension between economic growth and associated infrastructural interventions on the one hand, and the quality, sustainability and resilience of natural systems, spatial settlement patterns and urban societies on the other.
The question for the near future is how new relationships between economic development and the natural system can be established. A new role for (and treatment of) the shipping channels intersecting coastal regions will be crucial for strategies aiming to establish new relationships. That is why these strategies will only be possible when they are based on broad public debate and support.
PRE-PROGRAMME
12.10.2022 | Pre-conference program via online sessions (Zoom)
- Presentations and discussions related to the call for papers: Global Shipping Channels (Carola Hein, Sabine Luning, Han Meyer, Paul van de Laar): Urban Planning (proposal to be launched September 2022)
- Presentations and discussions related to the call for papers: Dredging as Urban Planning (Paul Hudson, Stephen Ramos, Sabine Luning, Carola Hein)
11-12.10.2022 | Pre-Event PBL-CCICED Seminar on River Basins and Deltas
The Planbureau voor de Leefomgeving (PBL, Netherlands Environment Assessment Agency) organizes a seminar on the future of river basins and delta regions, focusing on the Rhine delta, Yangtze delta and Mississippi delta, at 11-12 October. This seminar will be organized in collaboration with the CCICED (Chinese Counchil of International Collaboration on Environment and Development) and TNC (The Nature Conservancy, USA). The results and conclusions of this seminar will be presented at the 150 Years New Waterway Symposium
TOPICS
The symposium will take place on board of the ss Rotterdam. A former ocean liner that passed the New Waterway many times on the way
to America, before it got a permanent base in Rotterdam as a hotel and conference centre. In this historic environment speakers from (international) universities and other experts discuss man-made interventions in river mouths in favor of shipping traffic and port development and with large impacts on environmental and spatial aspects. You are involved in interesting topics such as the challenges and implications for water management, spatial planning and design, and how public support can be obtained.
KEY-NOTE SPEAKERS
Speakers include prof. Carola Hein, Patrick Meire, Sabine Luning, Paul van de Laar, Han Meyer, Stephen Ramos and Paul Hudson, among many others. More speakers will soon be announced, along with the definitive programme, which also includes a tour of the port and the city of Rotterdam. See the event page for more information.
SIDE PROGRAM OCTOBER 11-12
Multiple free pre-events will take place to set up the stage for the symposium, like:
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a hybrid seminar on the future of river basins and delta regions organized
by the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, the Chinese Council of International Collaboration on Environment and Development, and the Nature Conservancy (U.S.A.)• presentations and discussions around two calls for papers on “Global Shipping Channels”, and “Dredging as Urban Planning”
OBJECTIVES
By attending these events:
- participants will gain important insights on the value and future of river basins and delta regions from different countries
- discuss current issues and solutions around shipping channels with experts on the topic and
- get up-to-date information on policies, events, and publications
AUDIENCE
The symposium is aimed at professionals, scholars and stakeholders having an interest around the questions of water and spatial planning.
See you in Rotterdam!