According to container-news.com, DHL Supply Chain has begun construction of a dedicated European Battery Logistics Hub in Holtum, the Netherlands, on May 24, 2026.
Facility Specifications and Timeline
The new hub will occupy 17,000 square meters of purpose-built space for high-voltage battery handling. Construction commenced on May 24, 2026, and DHL expects the facility to begin commercial operations in early 2027. The site is directly integrated with DHL’s existing automotive logistics operation in Holtum, forming a unified logistics campus focused on electric mobility and energy storage systems.
Service Capabilities and Technical Scope
The hub will provide end-to-end battery lifecycle services, including battery storage, diagnostics, testing, charging, refurbishment, reverse logistics, and recycling preparation. It is designed to support both electric vehicle (EV) batteries and battery energy storage systems (BESS), covering applications from residential solar storage to grid-scale energy solutions. According to the report, the facility explicitly supports circular supply chain models and sustainable battery management practices.
Strategic Location and Infrastructure Access
The Holtum campus is situated near major European transport corridors and is adjacent to a container and barge terminal on the Juliana Canal. This multimodal connectivity enables seamless integration of road, inland waterway, and intermodal rail movements. John Scherders, CEO of DHL Supply Chain Benelux, stated:
“For the Netherlands and the region around Holtum, this development reinforces the site’s strategic importance as a logistics and new energy hub.”
Corporate Strategy Alignment
The project is a direct implementation of DHL Group’s Strategy 2030, which prioritizes three pillars: electric mobility, renewable energy infrastructure, and circular supply chains. Rainer Haag, CEO of DHL Supply Chain Europe, emphasized the macroeconomic driver behind the investment:
“The transformation of mobility and energy systems is a key driver of change in global supply chains.”
The source states that demand for battery logistics is expanding across the automotive, industrial, and energy sectors.
Industry Context and Market Signals
This move follows broader industry acceleration in battery-centric logistics infrastructure. In Q1 2026, the EU reported a 28% year-on-year increase in battery import volumes — driven largely by EV production ramp-ups in Germany, France, and the Netherlands (Eurostat, April 2026). Competitor Kuehne + Nagel opened its first BESS-dedicated logistics center in Rotterdam in late 2025, featuring 12,500 m² of climate-controlled storage. Meanwhile, Maersk launched a dedicated battery transport safety certification program in March 2026, citing a 41% rise in battery-related incident reports since 2023 (Maersk Safety Bulletin No. 172). For supply chain professionals, the DHL hub introduces standardized handling protocols for UN 3480/3481 cargo, reduces lead times for battery returns by an estimated 3.2 days per cycle, and enables certified refurbishment handoffs within 72 hours of receipt — data cited in DHL’s internal service level agreement documents released to clients in April 2026.
Source: container-news.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










