The European Transport Workers’ Federation (ETF) welcomes today’s European Commission proposals for an EU Port Strategy and an EU Industrial Maritime Strategy, insisting that workers must be placed at the heart of both initiatives. ETF stands ready to engage constructively with the European Commission, industry stakeholders and social partners to ensure that the final Strategy delivers a just, sustainable and socially responsible maritime future for Europe.
EU Port Strategy: competitiveness, security and quality jobs must go hand in hand
The EU Port Strategy rightly recognises the strategic role of ports in Europe’s economy, security, and green transition, as well as the importance of skills, safety, and workforce challenges.
However, ETF stresses that ports are not only infrastructure and logistics hubs — they are workplaces. To be effective, the Strategy must integrate social and labour considerations across all policy areas, including competition, concessions, security, investment, and governance. Europe’s ports will only be resilient, competitive, and secure if workers, social dialogue, and quality jobs are placed at the heart of port policy.
Berardina Tommasi, ETF Senior Policy Officer for Dockers said:
“We welcome the European Commission’s EU Port Strategy as a timely initiative at a moment of geopolitical uncertainty, supply-chain pressures, and climate transformation, when ports are central to the future of Europe. We particularly value the recognition of workers as key partners in crime prevention, the focus on health and safety, the emphasis on social dialogue, and the Commission’s intentions to assess competition dynamics, including vertical integration and mergers.
At the same time, we are concerned by the assumption that more competition through shorter port concessions is needed. European ports already face strong competition, and long-term concessions are essential to ensure stability, predictability, and investment.
Ports are not only infrastructure assets — they are major workplaces employing thousands of skilled workers who keep operations safe, resilient, and efficient every day. A truly strategic port policy balances competitiveness with quality jobs, strong labour standards, and meaningful social dialogue.”
Our key points:
EU Industrial Maritime Strategy: No Competitiveness Without Seafarers and Quality Jobs
We also welcome the European Commission’s effort to develop an EU Industrial Maritime Strategy, including the maritime transport sector and recognising its strategic importance for Europe’s security, resilience, economy, and energy independence.
The Strategy contains several positive elements that reflect long-standing ETF demands, including recognition of the maritime workforce recruitment and retention crisis, the strategic value of EU flags and the objective of enhancing the attractiveness of EU Member State flag. However, we insist that it must place workers at its core as Europe cannot secure supply chains, energy autonomy, fleet decarbonisation or secure maritime infrastructure without the people who operate the fleet. The EU can do more for a socially sustainable shipping without social dumping and equal treatment for all maritime professionals working between EU ports — regardless of nationality or flag. Work in European waters must mean European conditions.
Nikolaos Koletsis, ETF Senior Policy Officer for Maritime Transport said:
“We welcome the EU’s holistic approach linking shipbuilding and maritime transport, but the solutions must be more ambitious. Public investment should always come with strong social conditionality, while all crews operating regularly in European waters should benefit from EU standards. There is a proven link between working conditions and safety – safety at sea depends on people, and Europe’s resilience requires dual-use ferries that are built, flagged and crewed in Europe. International standards must also be reviewed to address excessive working hours that still affect seafarers.”
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