Prince Rupert to build large export transload facility to balance cargo mix

The Port of Prince Rupert said Thursday it has begun construction of a rail-to-container transloading facility that will significantly increase the Western Canadian port’s capacity to export agricultural, forestry and resin products while achieving a better import-export mix.

The project will consist of a 108-acre greenfield development on Ridley Island and is scheduled for completion in the third quarter of 2026. Ray-Mont Logistics will develop and operate the facility, which will provide transloading capacity for 400,000 TEUs a year.

Ray-Mont currently operates a transloading facility on a temporary Ridley Island location.

The temporary facility will transition to the permanent Ridley Island Export Logistics Project (RIELP), which will provide significantly more transload capacity, said Brian Friesen, vice president of trade development at the Price Rupert Port Authority.

“It will be enormous in size and scale — 10 times the size of the temporary one,” Friesen told the Journal of Commerce Thursday.

The C$750 million project will help import-heavy Prince Rupert establish a more balanced import-export flow, Friesen said. The import-export ratio has varied over time. Ten years ago, imports outnumbered exports two to one. In pre-pandemic 2019, exports accounted for 25 to 30% of the port’s total container volume. This year, exports are in the low-30% range.

“So we still have a long way to go,” Friesen said.

The project will include Prince Rupert developing a road-rail utility corridor that will connect the new transload facility with Fairview Container Terminal, giving unit trains 10,000 feet in length direct access to the site from the Canadian National Railway network. The connector corridor ensures that all product movements will be within the port authority’s jurisdiction, the port said in a statement.

The total capital investment of C$750 million is being provided by the port, Ray-Mont Logistics, CN, the Canadian federal government and the government of British Columbia. Canada’s National Transportation Corridor Fund is providing C$64.8 million and the province’s Stronger BC program is providing C$25 million toward the project, according to the statement.

Prince Rupert serves Canadian, US markets

Prince Rupert, with its CN intermodal connections to eastern Canada and to the US market through Chicago, is a gateway for Asian imports. The port seeks to grow as an export gateway for Canadian and US cargo. A more robust two-way trade will generate increased container volumes and assist in the shipment of export loads and repositioning of empty containers along the CN network, Friesen said.

“The project’s large scale, unit train capabilities, access to available empty containers and proximity and integration into container terminal operations make it a unique model that promises the ability to deliver significant new service offerings to exporters that will greatly improve the quality, cost and reliability of container supply chains,” the port authority said.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2023, October 19). Prince Rupert to build large export transload facility to balance cargo mix. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/prince-rupert-build-large-export-transload-facility-balance-cargo-mix_20231019.html

ILWU bankruptcy filing provides dramatic twist to long-running Portland dispute

A local labor dispute in Portland that started more than a decade ago is jeopardizing the financial health of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) to the point the union has resorted to filing for bankruptcy protection to avoid paying a $19 million court judgement.

The ILWU’s filing for Chapter 11 protection Friday in the US Bankruptcy Court for Northern California in San Francisco resulted from five years of work stoppages and slowdowns from 2012-17 at Terminal 6 in Portland. The US District Court in Portland in 2019 initially found the ILWU International and ILWU Local 6 in Portland liable for $93 million in damages to the operations of ICTSI Portland, which operated Terminal 6 at the time. The court in 2020 reduced the award to $19 million.

While sources say the complex case before the bankruptcy court could take weeks to sort out, the legal machinations are not expected to result in cargo-handling interruptions on the West Coast. The Port of Portland now operates Terminal 6.

“I would not expect there will be any job actions,” James McKenna, president of the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA), which represents terminal operators and shipping lines and negotiates the coastwide labor contract with the ILWU, told the Journal of Commerce Monday.

McKenna said that in the remote possibility the ILWU engages in any job actions, the grievance procedure in the new coastwide contract, which was ratified before Labor Day, would allow arbitrators to step in immediately to stop any interruptions.

Terminal operator ICTSI Portland told the Journal of Commerce Monday it does not believe the ILWU’s attempt to avoid the $19 million court-ordered payment via bankruptcy will succeed.

“The facts have already been legally established before the National Labor Relations Board and in numerous court proceedings, including before a Portland, Oregon jury, which in 2019 found the ILWU liable for its illegal conduct,” ICTSI said in a statement.

ILWU slams terminal operator’s ‘scorched-earth’ tactic

Details please refer to JOC news.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2023, October 2). ILWU bankruptcy filing provides dramatic twist to long-running Portland dispute. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ilwu-bankruptcy-filing-provides-dramatic-twist-long-running-portland-dispute_20231003.html