From Antwerp to Tomakomai: A Global Journey for a New Spirit
When 43 pieces of whisky distillery equipment left Antwerp earlier this year, few might have imagined the journey ahead — 170 tonnes of cargo spanning nearly 10,000 kilometers to Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido. But for COLI Logistics, this was business as usual: a door-to-door operation blending precision, patience, and planning.
After the vessel arrived safely at the Port of Tomakomai, the operation entered a new phase. The cargo — 3,000 cubic meters of tanks, stills, and processing units — was carefully discharged and stored for two weeks to complete customs formalities. Now, the real work begins on land.
Day and Night Deliveries Across Hokkaido
Since early this week, local transports have been rolling out — some by daylight, others under cover of darkness. Night convoys navigate narrow routes through Hokkaido’s industrial outskirts, moving oversized loads that require coordination between truckers, police escorts, and the receiving distillery site.
“Timing is everything,” said a project supervisor on site. “We’re working with just-in-time delivery windows, so every truck and every move has to be synchronized to the minute.”
Such precision isn’t unusual for project freight, but it’s a reminder that once the ship’s gangway is raised, the logistics story is far from over.
The Art of Coordination: Truck, Barge, and Vessel
Before the cargo ever reached Japan, the operation involved a complex multimodal sequence — a mix of truck, barge, and ocean vessel coordination. From factory pickup in Europe to transshipment at Antwerp and onward to Japan, each phase demanded meticulous control over timing and documentation.
One logistics manager described it as “a relay race with no baton drops.” Equipment dimensions varied widely, with some units requiring special lifting gear and cradles for safe sea fastening. Others were too large for conventional trailers, needing customized transport arrangements.
The COLI team oversaw every link in the chain — ensuring that once customs clearance was finalized in Japan, nothing stood in the way of delivery to the distillery’s new home in Hokkaido.
Whisky Meets Logistics Precision
For most whisky lovers, the story begins in a barrel. For logisticians, it begins in a packing list. Each stainless-steel fermenter and copper still on this project represents not just craftmanship, but a global supply chain working quietly in the background.
Whether it’s whisky or wind turbines, the challenge remains the same: moving the extraordinary safely, efficiently, and on time. And as these final convoys make their way to the distillery site, the fusion of old-world craft and modern logistics couldn’t be more fitting.
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