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Focus: Global Supply Chain and Logistics

Our Weekly Feature Article on Topics Related to Global Supply Chain & Logistics
 

From SCDigest's On-Target e-Magazine

- Aug. 5, 2015 -

 

Global Supply Chain News: Trend to Larger Container Ships Threatens Small and Mid-Sized US Ports


Container Traffic Almost Totally Gone Now from Portland; Impact on US Exports

 

SCDigest Editorial Staff

 

There have been several reports in recent months about the negative impact ever larger megaships are having on port productivity, leading to congestion, delays in container handling, and new surcharges by ports and terminals. (See US West Ports Challenged by Larger Ships, Container Alliances.)

In parallel, the larger ships are increasingly bypassing mid-sized US ports such as Portland or Baltimore, threatening their viability.

SCDigest Says:

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The issue goes beyond just the impact on local port and terminal operations. Higher costs and slower movements may severely hamper US exports from some regions of the country.

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The last major container shipping line ended its Portland run in March, leaving the city without regular ocean container service for the first time in some 40 years. Volumes at the port have almost completely dried up.

That has put a real hurt not only on Longshoremen but also farmers in the region. Farmers in Idaho for decades sent their crops downriver to the port in Portland, from which the produce was shipped across the world.

Now, that flow path is largely gone with the lack of Portland service by major container shipping lines, forcing farmers to truck their output to other ports, primarily Seattle-Tacoma - at much higher total logistics expense - as much as double previous costs. One grain farmer told the Wall Street Journal her logistics costs for export containers had actually tripled in a commodity business with low margins.

Other ports have of course watched these trends - put into even starker relief with what has happened to Portland - and are making moves to avoid the same fate. The Wall Street Journal, for example, recently reported that "Port operators from Newark, N.J., to Long Beach, Calif., are spending billions of dollars to dredge harbors, raise bridges and build larger terminals to accommodate megaships."

The trend toward larger ships and larger ports will accelerate once the Panama Canal finishes its expansion in 2016, making it easier for large vessels to navigate between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

Container economics are of course also a key factor, as most have been losing money in the face of low rates and weak demand, looking to the ever larger megaships - and related alliance among carriers to fill up the bigger ships - to reduce the cost per container and find a way to profitability.

What happened to Portland? The main factor in its decline is the port's shallow depths, just 43 feet, which prevents it from handling many of the even medium-sized new generation of ships. That as container lines continue to retire the smaller ships that used to serve Portland with bigger vessels. Portland can only handle ships on the 6500-TEU range.

Ships also take longer to get to Portland's more inland terminals, which require a winding 100-mile journey up the Columbia River, while Portland has also seen frequent delays in container handling, and experienced on-going labor disruptions over the past few years.

Portland was devastated when the major carrier still calling on the port, Hanjin, halted service there earlier this year. Shortly thereafter, Germany's Hapag-Lloyd , which moved fewer containers through Portland, also announced it was pulling out, citing "a need for efficiency and a competitive product" as the reason for ending service.



(Global Supply Chain Article Continued Below)

 
CATEGORY SPONSOR: SOFTEON

 
 

The port there still operates, with an occasional smaller container ship, and with more regular handling of cargo that isn't shipped in containers, including bulk commodities such as grains and also automobiles.

But many of the mid-sized and smaller US ports also face real challenges for relevance and survival.

"The reality is those [smaller] ports are not going to be able to sustain themselves and be competitive handling the deep-sea vessels that will be in prominent use on major East-West trade routes," Paul Bingham, an economist with the Economic Development Research Group, a consulting firm, told the Wall Street Journal.

The issue goes beyond just the impact on local port and terminal operations. As with the Idaho farmers, higher costs and slower movements may severely hamper US exports from some regions of the country.

So these at risk ports are taking action - and spending billions of dollars to do so.

Over the next 10 years, the Port of Charleston, South Carolina will plan spend about $2 billion at to build a container terminal, deepen its channel and expand road and rail access. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is raising the Bayonne Bridge connecting the states to allow larger ships to pass underneath. The goal in both cases: improve access for the larger container ships, in the 13000-TEU range. (SCDigest notes the Port of New York/New Jersey hit a record pace during the first six months of 2015, the Port Authority announced, with container volumes up 13.4% versus the same period in 2014).

Some analysts say Portland and other smaller ports can thrive by focusing on niche routes and finding customers in new parts of the world - but that won't be easy, as the move towards larger ships seems almost unstoppable.

Do you see much hope for smaller and mid-sized US ports? What do they need to do to survive? Let us know your thoughts at the Feedback button (email) or section (web form) below.


 

Recent Feedback

Very timely.  As others have noted, the other piece of the puzzle is basic location-port selection is often driven by proximity to population as well as pure transportation cost.  Hence the big ports are close to big populations (or specialized bulk industries-see Houston).

The competition coming between the West Coast, Panama Canal, and Suez Canal, especially for Asia container traffic to the middle of the country is likely to be fierce, but leavened by type of product.  As you go up the product value scale, the willingness to sacrifice 4-6 days of lead time or more to go through the Canal is problematic.  

Unfortunately for the smaller ports, none of these issues change large ship economies of scale.  If the investments by the big ports can at least keep productivity and throughput even for the big ships, then the small ports are left, at best, as load center subsidiaries and that entails more cost, more handling, and longer lead times.  Hard to see a robust future in that business.


Arnold Maltz
Associate Partner
GLDPartners
Aug, 05 2015
 
 
   

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