Port of Gdynia Joins Finnlines' Bay of Biscay Line - A New Ro-Ro Gateway Linking the Baltic with Western Europe

At the end of June, OT Port Gdynia became part of the Bay of Biscay Line, a new regular ro-ro service operated by Finnlines, marking a significant step in expanding the Port of Gdynia’s role in European logistics and intermodal transport networks.

business maritime economy pomerania ports transport and forwarding tricity marine tourism and recreation news

02 july 2025   |   21:24   |   Source: Gazeta Morska   |   Prepared by: Kamil Kusier   |   Print

fot. OT Port Gdynia

fot. OT Port Gdynia

The new line connects key ports across Finland, Poland, Belgium, the United Kingdom, and Spain, forming a full loop with weekly westbound and eastbound calls. The westbound route runs from Helsinki and Kotka (Finland) via Gdynia, Antwerp (Belgium), Sheerness near London (UK), and Zeebrugge (Belgium) to Bilbao (Spain). The eastbound leg mirrors this, returning from Bilbao to Helsinki.

OT Port Gdynia now hosts weekly port calls: departures to the west take place on Friday PM, while eastbound arrivals occur on Sunday AM. The service is operated by three next-generation Finneco-class ro-ro vessels, each offering 5,800 lane metres of cargo space—enough to accommodate approximately 400 trailers per sailing.

These vessels are engineered to carry a wide spectrum of wheeled cargo, including semi-trailers, trucks, industrial machinery, and out-of-gauge loads, the latter facilitated by mafi-type trailers designed for heavy and non-standard units. OT Port Gdynia is fully equipped to handle such cargoes, with the necessary terminal infrastructure and operational expertise already in place.

Importantly, the Finneco vessels meet the highest environmental standards. These are hybrid ro-ro ships, featuring electric propulsion assistance, advanced exhaust gas cleaning systems, solar panels, and shore power compatibility. As a result, they significantly reduce CO₂, NOₓ, and SOₓ emissions, aligning with broader EU decarbonisation goals and the maritime industry's drive toward cleaner transport corridors.

The launch of the Bay of Biscay Line is more than just a new service call—it positions Port of Gdynia as a strategic player in a modern, sustainable logistics chain spanning Northern and Southern Europe. It’s a move that reflects both operational growth and the port’s commitment to innovation in maritime transport.

Buy us a coffee, and we’ll invest in great maritime journalism! Support Gazeta Morska and help us sail forward – click here!

Kamil Kusier
redaktor naczelny

comments


enter content
COMMENT
nick

Add the first comment