West Coast ports say ready to handle peak season bump after front-loading surge

Container dwell times improved at North America’s major West Coast gateways in June despite strong volume growth amid front-loaded cargoes, and port managers say their marine terminals have both the capacity and fluidity needed to handle what’s expected to be a healthy peak season.

Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, Seattle-Tacoma and Vancouver registered double-digit percentage import growth in June, with volumes up 6% at Prince Rupert. Yet rail container dwell times improved from the month before, port managers said, adding that rail networks leading to key inland destinations such as Chicago and Memphis are operating smoothly.

The strong import volumes from Asia are due to several factors, including front-loading of fall and holiday merchandise and a diversion of some discretionary cargo to the West Coast from the East and Gulf coasts due to concerns about a possible strike by the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA).

Having already handled 10 new trans-Pacific services this year while recording improved performance metrics, and with ports along the West Coast of North America operating at 50% to 80% of capacity, the gateways say they are well-positioned to handle additional diversions from the East and Gulf coasts should an ILA strike occur after the current labor deal expires on Sept. 30. Furthermore, a normal seasonal dip in import volumes is likely in November and December, giving West Coast ports an additional buffer.

As the spike in imports has developed, US ports have been sharing with BNSF and Union Pacific railroads advance information on import volumes and operating conditions at marine terminals. The railroads have responded by increasing the deployment of railcars, locomotives and additional staffing to West Coast ports, port managers told the Journal of Commerce this week.

The Northwest Seaport Alliance of Seattle and Tacoma and its terminal operators, for example, hold daily calls with each of the railroads to share data and cargo projections, and railroads adjust their operations accordingly, said Jeff Bellerud, COO of the NWSA.

“We really get tactical,” Bellerud told the Journal of Commerce. “We’re impressed with the ability of the railroads to handle the spike.”

BNSF last month set a company record for direct ship-to-train loadings, beating the prior record that had been set in 2017 by 5%, said Jon Gabriel, the railroad’s vice president for innovation, service design and network strategy. BNSF has responded to the West Coast import growth by “surging rail cars, locomotives and crew staffing,” he said.

Details please refer to JOC news.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, July 24). MSC restores Trans-Pacific Liberty Service with new call at Philadelphia. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/msc-restores-trans-pacific-liberty-service-new-call-philadelphia_20240724.html

MSC restores trans-Pacific Liberty service with new call at Philadelphia

Mediterranean Shipping Co. is reintroducing a trans-Pacific service to the US East Coast that had been suspended in 2022, the second service the carrier has reinstated on the trade lane this year as Asia-US ocean freight rates have surged and Panama Canal restrictions have eased.

MSC said Wednesday its Liberty service to the East Coast will resume with the departure of the 4,432-TEU MSC Houston V from Singapore on Aug. 8. Along with Singapore, other Asia load ports include Shanghai and Busan. The US port rotation includes Miami, Savannah, Charleston, Philadelphia and New York-New Jersey.

MSC said in a statement that “ongoing robust demand in the trans-Pacific market” prompted the reintroduction of the Liberty service, with the loop’s new call at Philadelphia “responding directly to current market demands.”

The Liberty service had previously been run jointly with Maersk under the 2M Alliance. Introduced during the pandemic, MSC and Maersk suspended the service in late 2022 due to the sharp drop in ocean freight rates during that year.

This will be the second trans-Pacific service MSC has restored this year. In June, the carrier reintroduced its Mustang service with a port rotation that includes China’s major ports and Long Beach. The Mustang service had previously called Portland on the US West Coast.

Liberty’s reinstatement comes as the Panama Canal’s transit and draft limits have eased following the return of seasonal rains that have filled the reservoirs for the canal’s locks. The canal handled an average of 29 ships per day in June, up from an average of 22 in January.

Despite having the largest order book among ocean carriers, MSC has deployed most of its new ships to the Asia-Europe trade in response to strong demand there and the longer voyage times around southern Africa’s Cape of Good Hope. According to Bespoke Maritime Data Services, a sister company of the Journal of Commerce within S&P Global, MSC has deployed just two newbuild, 7,900-TEU ships on its trans-Pacific Emerald service to the US East Coast, the MSC Cotonou VIII and the MSC Tema.

Other carriers also added trans-Pacific capacity as rates from Asia surged in recent months. Zim Integrated Shipping Services began offering a premium shuttle service to Los Angeles along with another Asia service to Vancouver. Cosco Shipping and OOCL have also launched services to Long Beach and Vancouver.

Wan Hai Lines has also relaunched its AA1 service into Long Beach, while HMM restarted its PN3 service to the Pacific Northwest. Niche carrier Hede International has also introduced a feeder-size service to the US West Coast.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, July 24). MSC restores Trans-Pacific Liberty Service with new call at Philadelphia. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/msc-restores-trans-pacific-liberty-service-new-call-philadelphia_20240724.html

House approves bill authorizing harbor projects in Baltimore, Oakland

Congress is moving closer to approving legislation funding ports and authorizing navigational projects at the ports of Baltimore and Oakland after the House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved its version Monday.

The Water Resources Development Act (WRDA), which the House approved by a 359 to 13 vote, authorizes approximately $4.8 billion in projects, including the widening and deepening of the Baltimore harbor and the widening of Oakland’s turning basin.

The Senate’s Environmental and Public Works Committee approved its own version of the bill on May 22; the legislation awaits a final vote by the entire chamber. If the Senate bill passes, leaders from both chambers will conference to create a final bill to send to President Joe Biden to sign into law.

Most projects set for authorization through WRDA are focused on storm and flood mitigation, although the bill also includes projects focused on inland waterways.

If the bill is approved, the US Army of Corp of Engineers will have the go-ahead to widen Baltimore’s Seagirt Loop Channel by an average of 760 feet and deepen the West Seagirt Branch Channel to its authorized 50-foot depth at an estimated cost of $63.9 million. The Oakland project to widen the harbor’s turning basin and deepen the harbor to the authorized 50 feet has an estimated cost of nearly $609 million.

Both projects aim to make it safer for vessels to navigate in the harbors and reduce ship idling, cutting down emissions.

Congress takes up water resources legislation every two years and has done so since 2014.

Source:

JOC. (2024, July 23). House approves Bill Authorizing Harbor Projects in Baltimore, Oakland. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/house-approves-bill-authorizing-harbor-projects-baltimore-oakland_20240723.html

Charleston clears vessel backlog, but expects some delays through November

The South Carolina Ports Authority (SC Ports) has eliminated the backlog of container ships that numbered between 15 and 20 just a few weeks ago, but says it is likely some inbound vessels will have to sit at anchor over the next few months because Charleston’s Wando Welch Terminal will be operating with two berths instead of three through November owing to construction work.

The port was able to clear all the recently anchored vessels, helped by a temporary reopening of all Wando Welch’s berths last week amid a 10-day pause in the project work.

Construction work will resume July 15, again taking down a berth at Wando, but a port spokesperson said any delays will be minimal until August due to the nature of the work. Next month, customers should expect 48-hour delays getting into the port; those delays could extend into September and October depending on import volumes and progress made on the full opening of the Hugh K. Leatherman marine terminal.

“Our SC Ports team and maritime partners are working together to ensure fluidity for our customers amid this critical infrastructure project,” SC Ports CEO Barbara Melvin said in a statement to the Journal of Commerce.

The project work involves the construction of something called a toe wall, a structure that is necessary to retain the inner harbor depth at 54 feet to accommodate ultra-large container vessels. The work includes installing steel sheets along the wharf that act as a barrier to prevent sediment and soil from accumulating in the harbor and reducing the channel depth.

SC Ports also said it is in close communication with ocean carriers and customers about the progress of the toe wall work to ensure there is no “ping-pong” effect in which ocean carriers drop Charleston cargo into Savannah to avoid any potential delays.

During the pandemic, ocean carriers skipped Savannah to avoid delays and dropped Savannah-bound cargo in Charleston. The trucking community could not handle the longer drays and the result was that the delays shifted from Savannah to Charleston. SC Ports CEO Barbara Melvin has previously said she does not believe such a “ping-pong” effect will happen again because terminal operations are fluid in Charleston.

Leatherman, meanwhile, will reopen before the end of the year, according to port officials, but an official date has not been announced. If it happens before the work at Wando Welch is completed, it would put Charleston back at three operating berths again capable of handling ultra-large container vessels.

Source:

Ashe, A. (2024, July 9). Charleston clears vessel backlog, but expects some delays through November. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/charleston-clears-vessel-backlog-expects-some-delays-through-november_20240709.html

ILWU Canada illegal strike ruling averts Vancouver shutdown

Canada’s labor tribunal on Sunday ruled that a strike vote by union longshore foremen against DP World’s terminal at the Port of Vancouver was illegal, heading off the maritime employer’s threat to shut out workers at Canada’s largest container gateway in response.

The British Columbia Maritime Employer’s Association (BCMEA) called on the Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) to hold a hearing on Sunday after Local 514 of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) Canada issued a 72-hour strike against DP World Centerm last Friday.

The CIRB found that Local 514 “failed to bargain in good faith when it conducted a strike vote among the employees of only one member employers of the BCMEA and issued a strike notice based on that strike vote.”

The strike vote came ahead of a CIRB hearing scheduled for August about a complaint the BCMEA filed against Local 514 alleging the union was “protracting negotiations” over a new contract. In the event the union prevailed at the CIRB, the BCMEA said it was prepared to issue a port-wide lockout that would have shut down all cargo operations, except grain and cruise ships.” Although both are part of the international union, ILWU Canada negotiates separately from the ILWU on the US West Coast.

Local 514, which represents about 700 union foremen, has been trying to negotiate separate staffing and work rules with DP World following the terminal operator’s installation of remotely operated rail-mounted gantry cranes at Centerm. But the BCMEA says that contravenes the coastwide agreement with all employers.

The cranes were part of an expansion project completed last year that increased Centerm’s container capacity 60% to 1.5 million TEUs per year.

“Bargaining on an industry basis fosters stability and certainty,” the BCMEA said in a statement Sunday. “In targeting DP World [Canada], ILWU Local 514 is unfairly isolating a single terminal operator to create uncertainty and chaos, while many industry-wide issues remain unresolved in our shared collective bargaining process.”

Local 514 did not respond to a request for comment.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, July 8). ILWU Canada illegal strike ruling averts Vancouver shutdown. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ilwu-canada-illegal-strike-ruling-averts-vancouver-shutdown_20240708.html

Near-normal water levels allowing more ship transits through Panama Canal

The Panama Canal’s freshwater reservoirs are entering summer at close to normal levels, prompting the canal’s operator to increase the number of large ships moving through the waterway and allowing the ships to carry more cargo.

The Panama Canal Authority (ACP) said in an advisory this week it will open one more booking slot for neo-Panamax vessels — the largest class of ships that can transit the canal — starting in August, bringing the total number of daily neo-Panamax transits to nine.

In addition, the ACP said that it will add a booking slot for slightly smaller super-Panamax ships starting in the last week of July, bringing the total number of daily super-Panamax slots to 19.

Overall, the Panama Canal will be able to handle 35 ships per day starting in August; that compares to 24 daily booking slots at the start of May.

The increase in the number of ship transits comes as Panama sees relief from a drought that began in mid-2023 and reduced water levels in Gatun Lake, which provides the fresh water used in the canal’s lock system. That forced the ACP to reduce the number of daily ship transits to as few as 18 as of last October.

Carriers promptly started rerouting their trans-Pacific East Coast networks away from the canal due to fears those reduced transits would last through the first quarter of 2024. But rains have returned to Panama, bringing Gatun Lake to about an 83-foot depth, ACP data shows, which is its five-year historical average depth for July.

Amid the increase in the lake’s levels, carriers have started bringing back Panama Canal services that had been suspended.

The ACP also lessened the draft restrictions on neo-Panamax vessels, allowing vessels of 48-foot draft to transit the canal. During the height of the drought, neo-Panamax ships were limited to a 45-foot draft, forcing the vessels to carry less cargo.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, June 28). Near-normal water levels allowing more ship transits through Panama Canal. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/near-normal-water-levels-allowing-more-ship-transits-through-panama-canal_20240628.html