Operating activities
As an integrated provider of container handling, transport and logistics services, the Port Logistics subgroup offers services along the logistics chain between international ports and their European hinterland. The geographical focus of its operating activities is on the Port of Hamburg and its hinterland. The Port of Hamburg is an international hub for container transport by sea and land, with an optimal link to the economies of Central and Eastern Europe, Scandinavia and the Baltic region. The company’s core lines of business are represented by the Container, Intermodal and Logistics segments.
The Container segment pools the Group’s container handling operations and is the largest business unit in terms of revenue. Its activities consist primarily of handling container ships (loading and discharging containers) and transhipping containers to other carriers (rail, truck, feeder ship or barge). HHLA operates three container terminals in Hamburg – Altenwerder (CTA), Burchardkai (CTB) and Tollerort (CTT) – and further container terminals in Odessa, Ukraine (CTO) and Tallinn, Estonia (HHLA TK Estonia). The portfolio is rounded off by supplementary container services, such as maintenance and repairs.
The Intermodal segment is the largest of HHLA’s segments in terms of earnings. As a further key element of HHLA’s business model, which is vertically integrated along the transport chain, the segment provides a comprehensive rail and road network for seaport-hinterland traffic and, increasingly, continental traffic. HHLA’s METRANS rail companies operate regular direct connections between the ports on the North and Baltic seas and between the Northern Adriatic and its hinterland, as well as inland terminals to provide a comprehensive range of services for maritime logistics. In addition to transhipment services at the Port of Hamburg, the trucking subsidiary CTD transports containers by road, both locally and over long-haul distances within Europe.
The Logistics segment encompasses a wide range of services in the field of specialist handling, consulting and other business activities. Its service portfolio comprises both stand-alone and entire process chains for the international procurement and distribution of merchandise, including the operation of handling facilities for dry bulk, motor vehicles and fruit. The company also provides consulting and management services for clients in the international port and transport industry. New business activities, such as additive manufacturing and airborne logistics services, complete the portfolio. HHLA provides some of the activities in this segment together with partner companies.
The Holding/Other division is also part of the Port Logistics subgroup, although it does not constitute a separate segment as defined by the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). The Holding division is responsible for strategic corporate development, the functional management of the Container segment, the central management of resources and processes, and the provision of shared services for the operating companies. It also includes the properties specific to HHLA’s port handling business and the Group’s floating crane operations.
The Real Estate segment corresponds to the Real Estate subgroup. Its business activities encompass the development, letting and commercial and technical facility management of properties in the Port of Hamburg’s peripheral area. These include the Speicherstadt historical warehouse district. The world’s largest traditional warehouse quarter is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In this central location, HHLA offers some 300,000 m2 of commercial space. Other prime properties totalling approximately 63,000 m2 are managed by Fischmarkt Hamburg-Altona GmbH in the exclusive fish market area on the river Elbe’s northern banks.
A port’s catchment area.
Transportation via several modes of transport (water, rail, road) combining the specific advantages of the respective carriers.
Revenue from sales or lettings and from services rendered, less sales deductions and VAT.
Vessels which carry smaller numbers of containers to ports. From Hamburg, feeders are primarily used to transport boxes to the Baltic region.
In maritime logistics, a terminal is a facility where freight transported by various modes of transport is handled.
A port’s catchment area.
International financial reporting standards.