ILA, USMX agree on new wage offer and contract extension that reopens ports

Maritime employers and the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) have reached a tentative deal to reopen container terminals at East and Gulf Coast ports after trading new wage offers that would bring dockworker pay up over 60%. Longshore workers will work under a three-month contract extension until a formal deal is reached.

Official announcement of the breakthrough is expected Thursday evening, sources told the Journal of Commerce. The White House is scheduled to host a briefing Friday morning on the port strike. The ILA and United States Maritime Alliance (USMX), the employer group that represents ocean carrier and terminal operators in longshore contract negotiations, have yet to respond for a request for comment.

Ports are expected to reopen Friday.

Source:

Szakonyi, M., & Michael Angell, S. E. }. (2024, October 3). Ila, USMX agree on new wage offer and contract extension that reopens ports. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ila-usmx-agree-on-new-wage-offer-and-contract-extension-that-reopens-ports-5741882

Window to divert strike-affected imports to West Coast closing soon

Retailers and other importers who normally ship through the US East and Gulf coasts to destinations in the eastern half of the country say they have a short window to decide whether to begin rerouting goods through West Coast ports.

Three shippers, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told the Journal of Commerce that if the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) strike is resolved by the end of next week, they will likely continue to ship through East and Gulf coast ports. However, if it looks as though the strike will continue for more than a week, they must consider routings through US and Canadian West Coast ports, which would bring higher costs and possibly a limited capacity of the western railroads to handle a sustained surge of freight.

“I’m not going to make a knee-jerk reaction,” said an importer of furniture and home improvement merchandise who asked not to be identified. “Let’s see what happens, but once the pain of a week or two takes hold, there is the option to reroute through the West Coast.”

Those diversions “can make things worse from a cost and shipping cycle pattern,” the logistics manager acknowledged.

Jon Monroe, who serves as an adviser to non-vessel-operating common carriers (NVOs), said shippers have little choice but to divert freight if the strike drags on.

“They’ll have to transload through the West Coast,” he said. “There is no Plan B.”

Rail capacity concerns

Importers are concerned, however, about the capacity of the western railroads, inland rail hubs and distribution centers to handle a sustained surge of inland point intermodal (IPI) freight diverted from East and Gulf coast ports. They note that the BNSF and Union Pacific (UP) railroads are already handling record eastbound IPI volumes.

For their part, BNSF and UP say they have been preparing for a strong peak season on the West Coast and have pre-positioned sufficient intermodal assets in Southern California and the Pacific Northwest to handle cargo diversions should the ILA strike continue for several weeks.

In a Monday letter to Robert Primus, chairman of the US Surface Transportation Board, UP CEO Jim Vena said the railroad has established a “buffer of resources” to handle its growing intermodal traffic this fall that has been driven in part by a shift of cargo from the East and Gulf coast ports to the West Coast.

Details please refer to the JOC news.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2024, October 2). Window to divert strike-affected imports to west coast closing soon. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/window-to-divert-strike-affected-imports-to-west-coast-closing-soon-5741052

Ships backing up outside of strike-shut US East, Gulf ports

Container ship anchorages are growing outside of US East and Gulf coast ports on the second day of a dockworker strike, with carriers offering limited options to avoid delays and currently planning to divert only a handful of vessels to alternative ports.

As of Wednesday, at least 64 container ships were scheduled call one of the 15 US ports affected by striking members of the International Longshoremen’s Association, according to data from Sea-web, a sister product of the Journal of Commerce within S&P Global.

As the largest strike-affected port and first call on most weekly services, half of the ships are destined for the Port of New York and New Jersey, with estimated arrivals until Nov. 1, Sea-Web data show. In the first week of October, some 13 ships are scheduled to arrive at the New York-New Jersey port.

In addition to those ships, Sea-web data shows another 13 ships are currently at the ports, sitting at anchorage, with nine outside the Port of Savannah alone. The Georgia Ports Authority said in a statement Wednesday that when Savannah reopens, it will have the yard space to deal with the backlog.

The vessels are operated by carrier members of the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX), the employer organization that negotiates collectively with the ILA. It does not include smaller carriers that are not affiliated with the USMX, nor vessels that call non-ILA marine terminals.

Sea-web data looks at port destinations listed through automatic identification systems with an expected arrival by Nov. 1.

Thus far, carriers have made minimal changes to vessel schedules due to the strike. Hapag-Lloyd advised shippers Tuesday that two vessels in its Caribbean Express Service (CES) that would have called the Port of Virginia this month will now call Canada’s Port of Saint John. The carrier’s US Gulf–South America (GS1) service that calls Houston and New Orleans will instead discharge at the Mexican ports of Altamira or Veracruz over the next two weeks.

Maersk advised shippers Tuesday that it has “mapped out specific possible vessel-level contingencies that will be actioned depending on the duration of the labor dispute.” Maersk has not outlined specific diversions yet, but one of the vessels in its Asia–US East Coast TP16 service, the 8,540-TEU Seroja Lima, currently adrift outside the New York-New Jersey oirt, will now head to the Bahamas Port of Freeport, with an expected arrival of Oct. 8, according to the vessel’s latest schedule update from Maersk.

CMA CGM declared force majeure at the outset of the strike, which in many bills of lading allows carriers to discharge cargo wherever is most convenient.

If the strike continues, carriers will likely have to make new routing decisions by the end of the week, according to Sea-Intelligence Maritime Analysis. The backlog will equate to roughly 400,000 TEU, or 1.4% of global capacity, the loss of which would “push up freight rates, not just on the trades to the US, but likely across all major deep-sea trades,” Sea-Intelligence CEO Alan Murphy said in a report released Wednesday.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024b, October 2). Ships backing up outside of strike-shut US east, Gulf Ports. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ships-backing-up-outside-of-strike-shut-us-east-gulf-ports-5741090

Montreal port users not expecting quick intervention if strikes continue

The prospect of Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stepping in to prevent Montreal port workers from launching more and wider strikes if they choose to do so after their 72-hour work stoppage ends Wednesday looks dismal.

Trudeau’s Liberal government is in an increasingly fragile alliance with a more leftist — and more pro-union — New Democratic Party. As Trudeau faced a second no-confidence motion in Parliament on Tuesday, the government urged Montreal port workers and their employers to return to the table and said it is monitoring the situation closely.

Knowing that Ottawa will not apply any significant pressure, Montreal port workers have seized on the timing of US East and Gulf coast longshore workers launching a strike Tuesday for the first time in nearly 50 years. Last week, the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 375 announced that they would shut down the Viau and Maisonneuve container terminals, which account for approximately 40% of container capacity at Canada’s second-busiest port, starting the day before the International Longshoremen’s Association strike.

The union used a similar strategy in summer 2020, targeting specific marine terminals for three-day strikes before turning to other facilities, allowing — but significantly slowing — cargo flow. Those so-called rolling strikes lasted 12 days and were followed by five days of strikes in April 2021. The Trudeau government introduced back-to-work legislation to end the April 2021 strike.

The last few years haven’t shown any changes in Trudeau’s motivation to intercede. The federal government allowed a 13-day longshore strike at the ports of Vancouver and Prince Rupert in July 2023 before forcing a deal. More recently, Labor Minister Steven MacKinnon didn’t stop the country’s first nationwide strike involving both major railroads since 1987 until the 17th hour.

Notably, Parliament also hasn’t had the resolve to table back-to-work legislation, in part because the Conservatives, historically a stalwart for business, have become cozier with organized labor, according to three people familiar with the matter.

That has shipping executives who spoke to the Journal of Commerce pessimistic about an immediate government response to rising Montreal port worker agitation. CUPE and employers remain far apart on the same issues, namely salaries, wage guarantees and paid vacation in which workers aren’t on call, according to two sources close to the matter.

Details please refer to the JOC news.

Source:

Szakonyi, M. (2024, October 1). Montreal port users not expecting quick intervention if strikes continue. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/montreal-port-users-not-expecting-quick-intervention-if-strikes-continue-5740119

ILA’s Daggett promises dockworkers ‘great contract’ as strike begins

ELIZABETH, NJ — The head of the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) in the early hours of Tuesday pledged he would secure a “great contract” that he would like to complete by the end of the month, just hours after hundreds of union dockworkers at US East and Gulf coast ports went on strike at midnight.

“Whether it’s one week, two — I’m hoping by three it’s over, I’m hoping — you are making history here,” ILA President Harold Daggett told the crowd, noting the significance of the union’s first strike since 1977. “We are going to walk away with a great contract.”

The ILA rebuffed a last-minute contract extension from maritime employers that aimed to head off the strike. Daggett has said previously the ILA would neither work past the expiration of the current contract nor extend it. The union said in a statement early Tuesday morning the United States Maritime Alliance’s (USMX) latest offer “fell far short of what ILA rank-and-file members are demanding in wages and protections against automation.”

The strike, which has forced the closure of all major container terminals from Maine to Texas, has scrambled the expected arrival during October of 62 container ships originally destined for ports along the East and Gulf coasts, according to Sea-web, a sister product of the Journal of Commerce within S&P Global. The total capacity of those vessels is approximately 485,725 TEUs.

Ships are already planning to discharge cargo at non-affected ports. Hapag-Lloyd said Monday that vessels in its Caribbean Express Service that would have called the Port of Virginia this week now plan to call Canada’s Port of Saint John. In addition, the carrier’s South America East Coast Service is now preparing to call Mexico’s Port of Altamira instead of the US Gulf Coast ports it normally calls.

Details please refer to the JOC news.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, October 1). Ila’s Daggett promises dockworkers “great contract” as Strike begins. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ilas-daggett-promises-dockworkers-great-contract-as-strike-begins-5739618

Port of Montreal to face three-day strike against two terminals next week

Almost half of the Port of Montreal’s container capacity will be shuttered through the first half of next week as dockworkers there plan to strike two of its five container terminals, the latest move in a long-simmering standoff between the local longshore union and the port’s maritime employers.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 375 sent a 72-hour notice to the Maritime Employers Association (MEA) of its intent to strike, according to a statement Friday from the Montreal Port Authority. The strike will target the Viau and Maisonneuve container terminals from Sept. 30 through Oct. 2, reopening on Thursday.

The two terminals, which can handle a combined 1.1 million TEUs, account for 41% of Montreal’s container capacity. The port’s other three terminals will remain open, the port said.

The strike in Montreal will likely coincide with a strike by longshoremen along the US East and Gulf coasts, who are expected to walk off the job on Oct. 1 in what would be the first coastwide strike in those regions since 1977.

The Port of Montreal said that vessel calls to the two targeted terminals will be suspended, and trucks and rail will not be able to access them. The Viau terminal primarily handles services operated by Mediterranean Shipping Co., while Maisonneuve handles MSC, OOCL and Hapag-Lloyd services.

“Any work stoppage at the Port of Montreal has major consequences,” the MEA said in a separate statement. “With cargo handled by Montreal longshore workers already down 24% since 2022, we have a joint responsibility to secure a singed collective agreement as soon as possible.”

CUPE did not respond to a request for comment.

The strike notice comes two days after members of Local 375 voted to approve a strike. Under Canadian law, unions are authorized to call a strike within 60 days of a vote and must provide employers with a 72-hour notice. The Montreal Port Authority added that it has activated a “business continuity plan to ensure that the pressure tactics that will be used do not harm the rest of port operations.”

The strike also comes the same week Local 375 and MEA sat down in government-mediated talks on a new collective bargaining agreement to replace the one that expired at the end of 2023.

“Although negotiations are continuing, we are disappointed that they have not allowed the two parties to reach an agreement to date, while nearly $6 billion worth of cargo is expected on the Port of Montreal’s docks in the coming weeks,” Montreal Port Authority Chief Executive Julie Gascon said in the agency’s statement. “I therefore invite both parties to continue negotiations in order to avoid a work stoppage.”

It wasn’t immediately clear why Local 375 targeted the two terminals, which are owned by Canada’s Termont International. However, there is a history of bad blood between the two sides. In one incident, Termont managers who had been working at the terminals during a 2020 strike were attacked, with Montreal police having questioned longshore workers about the assault.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024c, September 27). Port of Montreal to face three-day strike against two terminals next week. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/port-of-montreal-to-face-three-day-strike-against-two-terminals-next-week-5737483

More US ports reveal contingency plans as ILA strike deadline inches closer

Several US ports along the US East and Gulf coasts are working under contingency plans ahead of a possible strike by dockworkers on Oct. 1, including extending terminal hours and implementing deadlines for operations.

The plans come amid the increasing likelihood that the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) will not reach an agreement with the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) on a new master contract covering East and Gulf coast dockworkers. ILA President Harold Daggett has said the union will not agree to an extension once the current contract expires on Monday, Sept. 30.

Port of Virginia outlines closure schedule

The Port of Virginia will begin stopping cargo operations on Sept. 30, according to port officials, with the last inbound train delivery scheduled for 8 am. Additionally, all inbound truck gates will close at noon. In a statement, the port said use of its Trucker Reservation System (TRS) is “strongly encouraged” on Sept. 30.

At 1 pm on Sept. 30, ocean operations will stop, vessels will be required to sail, and the last outbound train will leave, the port said. All motor carriers must leave the port at that time. At 6 pm, all other container operations will halt. Reefer units will remain plugged in but will not be monitored.

The Virginia Port Authority’s privately held terminal operating company, Virginia International Terminals, will not be charging demurrage for containers in the terminal during the strike.

“Once an agreement has been reached, the Port of Virginia will implement its resumption of operations plan and methodically and safely bring terminals back online,” the VPA said.

New Orleans adds Saturday hours

The Port of New Orleans has issued similar deadlines, but added Saturday hours at the New Orleans Terminal from 8 am to 5 pm on Sept. 28, with a one-hour break from noon to 1 pm. Port officials said any work stoppage from the strike will not increase demurrage charges.

At the New Orleans Terminal, which serves Mediterranean Shipping Co., Maersk and Zim Integrated Shipping Services, vessel operations will halt at noon on Sept. 30, with rail and gate operations stopping at 4 pm. Receipt of export reefer containers ends at 4 pm Sept. 27 and import reefers must be out of the gate by 4 pm Sept. 30 “unless prior approval is obtained from New Orleans Terminal,” according to the port.

At Port NOLA’s Ports America terminal — serving CMA CGM, Hapag-Lloyd, Seaboard, Evergreen, COSCO, OOCL and Yang Ming — deadlines for vessel operations have not yet been made public, but gate operations will conclude Sept. 30 at 4 pm. Import reefers must be out of the gate at that same time, whereas customers are responsible for ensuring export reefers are loaded by Sept. 30. Mirroring the situation at the Port of Virginia, reefers will remain plugged in, but will not be monitored, during a work stoppage.

Jacksonville expecting partial impact

In Jacksonville, a strike is expected to affect one-third of the Port of Jacksonville’s (JAXPORT’s) business, port officials said in a statement.

“The remaining two-thirds of JAXPORT’s business, including Puerto Rico cargo, will continue normally,” the port said. “In addition, none of JAXPORT’s 172 direct employees are ILA members, so all workers directly employed by JAXPORT will continue to work, which means all JAXPORT main gates and administrative functions will remain open regular operating hours.”

Still, customers are encouraged to contact their terminal operators as they are responsible for establishing operating hours.

The Alabama Port Authority said it is monitoring the potential effects of a strike at the Port of Mobile, where its container terminal is managed by APM Terminals.

Meanwhile, ports in the southern US are preparing for another potential impact to operations — the threat of Tropical Storm Helene, which is forecast to strengthen and make landfall along Florida’s Gulf Coast early Thursday.

Source:

Robb, L. (2024, September 24). More US ports reveal contingency plans as Ila strike deadline inches closer. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/more-us-ports-reveal-contingency-plans-as-ila-strike-deadline-inches-closer-5733992

Montreal dockworkers to take strike vote as contract talks continue

The union representing Port of Montreal dockworkers is scheduled to hold a strike vote this week just ahead of another round of mediation talks aimed at securing a deal in a nearly year-long standoff between maritime employers and Montreal’s longshoremen.

The Maritime Employers Association (MEA) said Monday that Local 375 of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) will hold a strike vote on Tuesday and Wednesday. The vote coincides with a mediation session overseen by Canada’s Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service that is scheduled to take place Thursday.

While the vote will hang over Thursday’s talks, the MEA said the CUPE still must provide three days’ notice before walking out. If approved, the authorization for a strike will be valid for 60 days from the vote.

“We remind you that no pressure tactics can be exercised before a 72-hour notice is sent to the Minister of Labor,” the MEA said in a statement.

The vote for a strike comes about a year after Local 375 requested mediation in talks between Port of Montreal employers and dockworkers when negotiations hit an impasse. The collective bargaining agreement covering 1,120 longshore workers at Montreal expired at the end of 2023.

The MEA lost a bid earlier this year to have longshore work declared an “essential service,” which would have barred dockworkers from a strike. Montreal was the scene of labor job actions throughout 2020 that resulted in a nearly 11,000-container backlog that took weeks to clear.

Local 375 is reportedly seeking a 20% wage increase over the four-year term of its contract, along with protecting its wage guarantees.

The specter of a port strike in Eastern Canada comes as unionized longshore foremen are still in a standoff with British Columbia maritime employers over a new collective bargaining agreement. And US East and Gulf coast dockworkers are close to launching their first strike in nearly half a century as talks between the International Longshoremen’s Association and the United States Maritime Alliance remain stalled.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024b, September 23). Montreal dockworkers to take strike vote as contract talks continue. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/montreal-dockworkers-to-take-strike-vote-as-contract-talks-continue-5733220

Some US ports extending gate hours ahead of strike deadline

Some ports along the US East and Gulf coasts are going public with their contingency plans ahead of a planned strike by dockworkers on Oct. 1, including staying open for business on weekends.

That comes as some ocean carriers are cutting off new export bookings ahead of the possible work stoppage and issuing surcharges for cargo en route to potentially closed ports.

The contingency plans come amid the increasing likelihood that the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) will not reach an agreement with the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) for a new master contract covering East and Gulf coast dockworkers. ILA President Harold Daggett has told his members that the union will not agree to an extension once the current contract expires on Sept. 30.

The Georgia Ports Authority (GPA) said in a customer advisory Wednesday that shippers should take delivery of cargo before Oct. 1, noting its Garden City Terminal in Savannah will be closed after that in the event of a strike. In addition to opening for the two Saturdays remaining in September, Garden City will open for a full day on Sunday, Sept. 29 for cargo retrieval.

The GPA said it will take export containers until Sept. 30, including refrigerated containers. But it said that if a reefer box does not make it onto a ship by that day, “they will not be monitored and maintained if the port is closed due to a work stoppage.”

The GPA added that it will not charge terminal demurrage to shippers during a work stoppage.

A notice Wednesday from the Port of Houston said its two container terminals plan to open truck gates and work on vessels up until 7 pm on Sept. 30, with the cutoff for export drop-offs an hour earlier. The port said it is evaluating the need for extending regular work hours for the terminals next week, with plans to open Saturday, Sept. 28.

“We encourage imports to be picked up as soon as possible, anything in the yard after 7 pm on September 30th, 2024, will be unavailable until the work stoppage ends,” the notice said. Houston said it would waive an import dwell fee for containers.

The Port of Virginia said in an operations alert that it will open its two main container terminals and the Pinner’s Point Container Yard, which handles empties and chassis, for the next two Saturdays and the Sunday immediately before a strike.

Details please refer to JOC news.

Source:

Angell, M. (2024, September 18). Some US ports extending gate hours ahead of strike deadline. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/some-us-ports-extending-gate-hours-ahead-of-strike-deadline-5730261

Cargo and vessel disruption expected after typhoon closes Shanghai, Ningbo ports

Shippers and ocean carriers using the major Chinese load ports of Shanghai and Ningbo will face extensive disruption due to terminal closures and vessel bunching caused by Typhoon Bebinca, which made a direct hit on Shanghai Monday.

Hapag-Lloyd warned that the berth situation at both ports was “expected to deteriorate further” due to the storm.

The typhoon, the strongest cyclone to hit Shanghai in 75 years with winds of 95 mph, caused extensive flooding and property damage in Shanghai and neighboring Jiangsu province as it made its way inland Monday and Tuesday.

Hapag-Lloyd said in an advisory Monday that ships were already waiting between 36 and 60 hours to berth at Shanghai and 24 to 48 hours to berth in Ningbo due to vessel bunching ahead of the storm.

Shanghai International Port Group, which controls all the container terminals at the world’s busiest container port, said all its facilities closed Sunday ahead of the storm’s arrival. It said its Yangshan offshore deepwater port complex, about 70 miles from the city center, reopened around midnight local time on Monday.

Cargo operations at its inner-city facilities, including the Waigaoqiao container terminal complex in Pudong and terminals at Hudong and the Wusong port area, were due to restart early Tuesday local time.

Officials at Ningbo-Zhoushan port, the third-busiest container port globally, confirmed the terminal complex closed Sunday and restarted operations late Monday.

Bebinca pounded the Yangtze River delta region about a week after southern China, northern Vietnam and Myanmar were struck by Typhoon Yagi, which closed ports in Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Haiphong.

Carriers and forwarders said Bebinca hit midway through a three-day public holiday, with offices only expected to reopen Wednesday. Consequently, it was too early to assess the full effect of the storm on cargo movements and vessel schedules.

“Although the typhoon is expected to weaken [Tuesday], logistics and transportation delays are expected to continue after then,” a senior executive at a Shenzhen-based forwarder told the Journal of Commerce Tuesday.

Air cargo operations at Shanghai’s Pudong and Hongqiao airports were also halted Sunday evening after officials closed the two gateways ahead of the storm, although they have since reopened.

Hundreds of flights were also canceled at Ningbo and Hangzhou airports, officials said.

Source:

Wallis, K. (2024, September 17). Cargo and vessel disruption expected after Typhoon Closes Shanghai, Ningbo Ports. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/cargo-and-vessel-disruption-expected-after-typhoon-closes-shanghai-ningbo-ports-5729174