Post-Panamax cranes unload intermodal containers at the Port of Savannah's Garden City Terminal. Photo: Georgia Port Authority

Post-Panamax cranes unload intermodal containers at the Port of Savannah's Garden City Terminal. Photo: Georgia Port Authority

Intermodal cargo is booming at the nation’s ports. The Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach both reported record levels of cargo. Georgia's Port of Savannah hit its highest annual volume ever, and the Port of New York and New Jersey also shattered its previous annual cargo volume record, set in 2015.

Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach

The Port of Los Angeles moved more cargo in 2017 than in any time in its 110-year history, racking up 9.34 million TEUs (Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units), a 5.5% increase over 2016’s record-breaking year. It’s the most cargo moved annually by a Western Hemisphere port, according to officials.

Supply chain efficiencies implemented by the Port in 2017 included technology upgrades, like the new “Port Optimizer” digital information portal, which aggregates key cargo data online for better cargo tracking, projections and productivity. Infrastructure upgrades like those completed at TraPac Container Terminal and Yusen Terminals during 2017 continue to boost the port’s ability to service increasingly larger ships, as well as to more efficiently facilitate cargo movement throughout its terminals.

In addition, the Port of Long Beach reported its busiest year ever in 2017, moving 7.54 million TEUs, an increase of more than 11%, despite having to deal with replacing a bankrupt shipping tenant.

Port of New York and New Jersey

Thanks in part to completion of the Bayonne Bridge Navigational Clearance Project last summer, the Port of New York and New Jersey handled 6.7 million TEUs (a 20-foot-long intermodal cargo container), a 5.3% increase over the 6.37 million TEUs handled in 2015.

The record volumes allowed the port to maintain its position as the third largest port in the United States with 15.4% market share and the busiest on the East Coast with a 32% market share.

Part of the increase is due to a booming economy. Another, for ports on the East Coast, is likely larger container ships. Since the widening of the Panama Canal, some ships that previously had to dock on the West Coast and truck their product eastward are now able to deliver to the East Coast instead.

At the Port of New York and New Jersey, the bridge project raised the clearance under the crossing from 151 feet to 215 feet, allowing ships as large as 18,000 TEUs to travel under it to port facilities in Newark, Elizabeth and Staten Island. Following the raising of the bridge, one of the port’s major shipping lines – CMA CGM – began a new service to the port using primarily 14,000-TEU vessels.

Georgia Port Authority

Further south, the Georgia Port Authority reported the Port of Savannah handled more than 4 million TEUs in 2017, the port’s highest annual volume ever and an increase of 11% from last year. For the month of December, GPA handled 323,000 TEUs, up 10.6%, for the busiest in its history.

Georgia recently announced a strategic growth plan for its ports that will allow for 10 million TEUs a year. The GPA’s 2028 Plan calls for 42 ship-to-shore cranes, 200 yard cranes, new RTG lanes and significant intermodal expansion in Savannah. The GPA will soon open its second inland terminal in Northwest Georgia and break ground on the Mason Mega Rail project at Garden City Terminal. Combined, both intermodal projects will open new markets while significantly reducing rail crossings and over the road freight through Savannah, Atlanta and beyond, according to GPA.

The Georgia Port Authority is working on deepening its waters to allow the larger container ships. Savannah's outer harbor dredging will be finished in March, bringing the Savannah Harbor Expansion Project to 50% completion. Deepening the inner harbor should be complete by late 2021, allowing Neo-Panamax vessels to take on more cargo and transit the river with greater scheduling flexibility.

“Savannah is double the size of the next largest port in the region, highlighting Georgia’s growing role as a gateway for American cargo,” GPA Executive Director Griff Lynch told Maritime Executive. “Similarly, there is no deepening project more significant in the nation at this time than the Savannah Harbor Expansion Project.”  

Cutting pollution at the ports

Even as cargo is increasing, the ports brag that pollution is dropping.

The Port of New York and New Jersey said even with the increase in cargo volume since 2015, the particulate matter and nitrogen oxide emissions created by port activities have gone down by more than 14% – equivalent to removing at least 104,000 passenger cars off the street per year – due to the port’s Clean Air Strategy environmental programs.

Last summer, the Port of Los Angeles reported that it achieved record clean air gains while moving more cargo than ever in 2016, according to the Port’s 2016 Inventory of Air Emissions. Since the Port’s baseline inventory in 2005, diesel particulate matter (DPM) emissions have fallen 87%, sulfur oxides (SOx) emissions have plummeted 98%, and nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions have dropped 57%. During the same period, the port moved more than 8.85 million TEUs.

About the author
Deborah Lockridge

Deborah Lockridge

Editor and Associate Publisher

Reporting on trucking since 1990, Deborah is known for her award-winning magazine editorials and in-depth features on diverse issues, from the driver shortage to maintenance to rapidly changing technology.

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