Key:CEMT

CEMT
Description
Classification of European Inland Waterways 
Group: Restrictions
Used on these elements
Requires
Useful combination
Status: de facto

CEMT is a classification for European inland waterways and extends waterway=* (axis of river, canal, fairway). CEMT=* is used on the European waterways that make up its water-based transportation network.

CEMT=* should only be used in correspondence with the official CEMT classification of the waterway. For waterways that lack a CEMT classification, see the other water-based transportation tags in the access tree.

Waterways

List of all European inland waterways: WikiProject_Europe/E-waterway_network

Classification

Seamark / iENC
... : category
CEMT-Class/Valuemax. Lengthmax. Width max. DraughtHeightRemark
10----inofficial, used for recreational boating fairways
2I38,505,051,8-2,24of regional importance
3II50-556,62,54-5of regional importance
4III67-808,22,54-5of regional importance
5IV80-859,52,55,25-7of international importance
6Va95-11011,42,5-4,55,25-7of international importance
7Vb172-18511,42,5-4,55,25-9,1of international importance
8VIa95-11022,82,5-4,57-9,1of international importance
9VIb185-19522,82,5-4,57-9,1of international importance
10VIc193-20034,22,5-4,59,1of international importance
11VII195/28534,22,5-4,59,1of international importance

The unofficial classificiation CEMT=0 is often used when source data (such as government provided data on waterways) marks this as a waterway suitable for general recreational use. CEMT=0 implies motorboat=yes and canoe=yes, but also tends to strongly imply ship=no.

The presence of CEMT=* with value of I or higher, implies that an inland waterway is  navigable (within the size and draught constraints shown in the table above) for the purposes of water transport.

CEMT=* is not the only tag that can indicate navigability on waterways. Outside of Europe, ship=* may be used instead for shipping links. For waterways that lack a CEMT=* tag, boat=* and its descendants can be used to indicate navigability by smaller vessels.

Tools

Sources

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See also

References

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