Tag Archives: ocean shipping

Drewry – West Coast upgrade

Drewry’s Container Insight Weekly had this detailed piece on West Coast usage by large ships.  The major takeaway: bigger ships are calling but it may be too soon for many of the ULCC (18000 teu or so) to call yet, due to port related delays.  There’s also a sort of bedlam caused by the reshuffling alliances; the firms in each alliance have different preferences as to which terminal to use at the ports. Hence there’s no stability in where a ship might call on each visit.  To fix this will require compromise on ocean carrier objectives, like “always use our affiliated terminal when you come to LA”.  Stability would make it simpler for the terminals to plan how to unload or load and get the customers’ cargoes on the way to their destinations.  That part is challenging enough for the ports terminal operators today. Everyone has to work together to improve the customer (cargo owner) journey (literal and figurative!!!).

  The number of containerships of 13,000 teu or above deployed on the Asia-US West Coast trade has nearly doubled since the start of 2017. How long before the mega-ships arrive?

Source: Drewry – Weekly Feature Articles – West Coast upgrade

FMC plan for pilot information portal fails Senate funding

Not everyone thinks assembling big data is a good idea! Perhaps they have alternative facts.

I just subscribed to this source. Even though they do not disclose who they are, it might provide interesting information.

  Labor-related concerns were cited by the Senate, but the project will likely move forward without the funding.

Source: FMC plan to develop pilot information portal fails to receive Senate funding | Supply Chain Dive

U.S. Ports Upbeat on Container Volumes

Some US ports are flourishing…

Maritime Executive Logo   Import volumes at major container ports in the U.S. are projected to rise 4.7 percent in the first half of 2017 compared with the same period a year

Source: U.S. Ports Upbeat on Container Volumes