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Jan De Nul Group's newest crane vessel, Les Alizés, kicks off her maiden assignment by installing the first of 107 monopile foundations for the construction of

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WELCOME TO OUR EXHIBITION STAND

Our offshore colleagues will be at the Adipec trade fair in Abu Dhabi, UAE, from 31 October till 3 November 2022. This leading fair devotes four whole days to matters such as offshore and marine energy. We hope to meet you to discuss possible collaboration.  

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Fujairah

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Adipec
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Cable and Umbilical Installation Vessel - Jan De Nul Group

In Bruges city centre, Soetaert completed the foundation works for the brand-new BRUSK exhibition hall.

On Friday 25 August, we organised a Safety Day on the premises of our subsidiary Soetaert, in Ostend.

One year after the demolition of the last remaining buildings by the developers PSR-CODIC-TRIGINTA, Mayor Alexander Vandersmissen and Alderwoman for Urban ...

In Les Awirs, Jan De Nul executed remediation works for the construction of a combined-cycle gas turbine for energie company ENGIE

Envisan, the environmental subsidiary of Jan De Nul, was awarded a prize for its river transport on the Day of Inland Navigation and Intermodality.

Multipurpose Vessel - Jan De Nul Group

Today, Ministers Christophe Collignon and Frédéric Daerden, Mayor of the City of Liège Willy Demeyer and First Deputy-Mayor Christine Defraigne, as well ...

Our colleague Mieke De Mûelenaere on her experiences in the dredging sector.

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The worldwide usage of raw materials has risen to unprecedented heights in recent decades. Sand usage is no exception. It is one of the most exploited natural materials. Of course that doesn't come without consequences. The social concern about the negative impact involved with the immense sand usage is growing. No need to explain, the dredging industry also has its role to play in this. We therefore bear an important responsibility to reverse this negative trend. We are more than aware of this.

According to research by UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme), sand is currently the most exploited raw material after water, and its use has no less than tripled in the past twenty years. Entailing inevitable ecological, political, social and economical consequences.

It shapes today's world

Sand is the foundation of modern society. We use it to raise land, to protect coastal areas against storms and use it in concrete and tarmac, glass and microchips, even in toothpaste and chocolate. But if you remove it in the wrong place, coasts start to erode, ground water becomes saline and fishing grounds disappear.

Sand is not equally available around the world. Some countries seem to feel they have unlimited supplies, others satisfy their hunger for sand by digging in vulnerable areas like beaches and rivers. Or by chasing inhabitants off their grounds, often with disastrous consequences for man and environment.

More and more often large infrastructure and dredging projects are confronted with resistance or have to deal with permission issues. Campaign groups around the world are sounding alarm bells, even if there is no obvious solution or alternative. Providing an answer to those concerns is a mutual responsibility of governments, initiators, designers, contractors and stakeholders.

No head in the sand

GRID GENEVA, a partner of UNEP, assists governments in the management of sand supplies. In September 2023, they launched Global Sand Watch, a data platform that follows the activities of more than 8,000 dredging vessels. The platform shows how much sand is extracted at which place, how efficient rules are and how strictly they are applied. 

Furthermore they published their report 'Sand and Sustainability' in 2022, calling on stakeholders to contribute to a more sustainable use of sand. The dredging industry actively takes to the stage to turn the tide. We have enormous amounts of valuable knowledge and experience at our disposal that can be utilised to turn negative impact into positive contributions.

Observing physical and ecological processes, for example, provides insights we use to create nature-based designs. The use of excess sediments from one project reduces the need for sand at another location. Open communication and involving local input, in turn, ensures a broad-based project. Thanks to operational and contractual flexibility, we are able to adjust when circumstances change. If there is one fundamental idea guiding us in all initiatives we take, it is the awareness that we are citizens first, and only then dredgers.

Sand as a resource

In cooperation with UNEP, IADC (International Association of Dredging Companies) published the paper 'Sand as a Resource'. It lists the various impacts of dredging activities, state possible solutions and mention practical examples. By spreading that knowledge to a broader audience, we hope to get a large and broadly based movement going that regards and treats sand as the precious resource it is.

Interested in knowing more? Read the paper 'Sand as a Resource' via the button below.

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La consommation mondiale de sable connaît une augmentation sans précédent

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Sand is one of the most exploited resources in the world. To reverse the negative impacts of this, the dredging sector is taking its responsibility.

On Friday 15 September, many Jan De Nul colleagues participated in World Cleanup Day and cleared 2010 kg of litter across different sites.

Jan De Nul orders a next-generation cable laying vessel, Fleeming Jenkin, with a cable carrying capacity of 28,000 tonnes.

On the occasion of the finished bicycle and pedestrian bridge 'La Passerelle des Reflets', an memorable visit day took place in the company of the first buyers.

In the port of Gdynia, Jan De Nul performed dredging and backfilling works to keep the port accessible to larger container vessels.

Heavy Lift Vessels - Jan De Nul Group

The official foundation stone of the new VRT House on Reyerslaan has been laid. This happened Wednesday morning under the approving eye of VRT CEO Frederik...

The Régie des Bâtiments, the federal state's property manager, and the 'Hortus Conclusus' contractor consortium, consisting of Jan De Nul and EEG, today gave th

Jan De Nul Group's newest jack-up installation vessel Voltaire recently installed her very first offshore wind turbine at Dogger Bank. Soon after installing...