A 2013 Accord Sedan became the one millionth Honda vehicle exported from the United States when it boarded a ship at the Port of Port Hueneme earlier this month.
The vehicle departed on a nearly 6,000-mile journey across the Pacific Ocean to Seoul, South Korea, on Dec. 12. The milestone came 25 years after the first US-made Honda automobile was exported overseas.
The millionth Honda US export vehicle, a silver Accord EX-L Sedan, rolled off the assembly line in Marysville, Ohio on Dec. 5, 2012 and was then transported to Port Hueneme in Ventura County, California for export overseas.
Honda currently exports automobiles to more than 40 countries from the US through seven port facilities in five states. The Port Hueneme facility, which Honda has been using for six years, is the company’s only one on the West Coast.
Honda currently exports automobiles to 49 countries outside North America, with total exports expected to reach nearly 100,000 Honda and Acura vehicles from the US by the end of 2012. The company says that within two years, it will export more vehicles built in its auto plants in North America than it imports from Japan. By 2014, the company says, it’s expected to increase automobile production capacity in North America from the current 1.63 million to 1.92 million units per year.
In coming years, the car company says, annual exports of Honda and Acura automobiles from the US are expected to surpass the company’s previous single-year export record of 105,511 vehicles, which was set in 1994.
Friday, December 28, 2012
Seattle Port Announces Commissioner Replacement Process
The Port of Seattle Commission has announced the outlines of the process and the timing for identifying and appointing a successor to fill the vacancy on the Commission that will be created when Commissioner Gael Tarleton resigns from the Commission Jan. 31, 2013.
Tarleton is resigning because on Nov. 6 she was elected to represent the 36th legislative district in the Washington State House of Representatives.
Under state law, the Commission will have 90 days to appoint a successor, with the decision made by majority vote at a Commission meeting. Tarleton’s successor will serve until the November 2013 general election when a candidate will be publicly elected to complete her term, which expires Dec. 31, 2015.
The process and proposed schedule announced by the Commission includes a Jan. 10, 2013 issuance of a notice of the vacancy. From this date, applicants will have 15 business days, excluding holidays, to submit their application materials to the Commission.
A town hall-style meeting at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport for interested individuals to ask questions about the appointment process will then be held Jan. 22, followed by a Feb. 1 deadline for applications, which then launches a 90-day window for a successor to be appointed.
“The Commission will alter the schedule if necessary to ensure we have a robust process,” Port of Seattle Commission President Tom Albro said, “but we believe our schedule allows opportunities for public comment and a thoughtful review of interested candidates.”
More information on the selection process is available as a PDF on the port’s website, and application materials can also be found on the site.
Tarleton is resigning because on Nov. 6 she was elected to represent the 36th legislative district in the Washington State House of Representatives.
Under state law, the Commission will have 90 days to appoint a successor, with the decision made by majority vote at a Commission meeting. Tarleton’s successor will serve until the November 2013 general election when a candidate will be publicly elected to complete her term, which expires Dec. 31, 2015.
The process and proposed schedule announced by the Commission includes a Jan. 10, 2013 issuance of a notice of the vacancy. From this date, applicants will have 15 business days, excluding holidays, to submit their application materials to the Commission.
A town hall-style meeting at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport for interested individuals to ask questions about the appointment process will then be held Jan. 22, followed by a Feb. 1 deadline for applications, which then launches a 90-day window for a successor to be appointed.
“The Commission will alter the schedule if necessary to ensure we have a robust process,” Port of Seattle Commission President Tom Albro said, “but we believe our schedule allows opportunities for public comment and a thoughtful review of interested candidates.”
More information on the selection process is available as a PDF on the port’s website, and application materials can also be found on the site.
Labels:
Gael Tarleton,
Port of Seattle
2013 WPPA Board President Chosen
Port of Vancouver USA Commissioner Jerry Oliver will serve as president of the Washington Public Ports Association (WPPA) Board of Trustees for 2013.
The WPPA, which promotes the interests of public ports through government relations and advocacy programs, was formed by the Washington State Legislature in 1961. Oliver was elected president on November 30 at the association’s annual membership meeting in Seattle, Washington.
“As a true believer that the Port of Vancouver plays a critical role in the economic well-being of my own community, I am honored to serve on the board of an organization that promotes the value of public ports throughout our state,” he said.
Oliver, who was elected to the Port of Vancouver Board of Commissioners in 2007, has been a member of the WPPA board for three years. He’s also the incoming president of the Port of Vancouver’s three-member Commission. His current six-year term on the board expires at the end of 2013.
Oliver holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Michigan. His career includes 20 years in the medical products distribution business as well as seven years in the financial brokerage business, according to the Port of Vancouver. Oliver also was self-employed for eight years when he worked in mid-market mergers and acquisitions. He retired from business in 2008.
The WPPA, which promotes the interests of public ports through government relations and advocacy programs, was formed by the Washington State Legislature in 1961. Oliver was elected president on November 30 at the association’s annual membership meeting in Seattle, Washington.
“As a true believer that the Port of Vancouver plays a critical role in the economic well-being of my own community, I am honored to serve on the board of an organization that promotes the value of public ports throughout our state,” he said.
Oliver, who was elected to the Port of Vancouver Board of Commissioners in 2007, has been a member of the WPPA board for three years. He’s also the incoming president of the Port of Vancouver’s three-member Commission. His current six-year term on the board expires at the end of 2013.
Oliver holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Michigan. His career includes 20 years in the medical products distribution business as well as seven years in the financial brokerage business, according to the Port of Vancouver. Oliver also was self-employed for eight years when he worked in mid-market mergers and acquisitions. He retired from business in 2008.
LA Port Wins Communications Awards
The Port of Los Angeles has won 10 communications awards in
an annual competition hosted by the American Association of Port Authorities.
The port’s 2011 Waterfront Summer Concert Series won top
honors in the “excellence” category, and nine other programs – including the port’s
“LAtitude” video e-news magazine, LA
Waterfront Public Outreach Program and its School Boat Tour Program – were also
recognized in various categories.
The AAPA is an alliance of more than 140 ports in the
Western Hemisphere. AAPA Award entries are judged each year by transportation
industry PR practitioners who are members of the Public Relations Society of
America National Chapter in Washington DC.
The Port earned awards and recognition for a number of
communications platforms that include:
LAtitude, the
port’s e-news magazine; TradeConnect, a business and legislative outreach
program that assists small and medium-sized businesses in establishing or
increasing their importing and exporting potential; and the School Boat Tour
Program, a free, educational boat tour program for fifth and sixth graders
within the Los Angeles Unified School District.
Also recognized by the AAPA was the port’s Mariner’s Guide,
pocket-sized handbook that provides tidal information for persons who pilot or
operate ships and small boats in and around the port; the Portfolio TV show, a
quarterly half-hour program that focuses on informing local audiences about
port operations, community events, environmental developments and
infrastructure projects, among other issues. It airs on regional cable TV
networks.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Port of Anchorage Dock Construction Could Be Undone
Most of the work to build new dock areas at the Port of
Anchorage as part of an expansion project could be undone because of improper
construction, the city and port officials say.
The deconstruction option was one of three possibilities
discussed by officials during a three-day session regarding the project.
The mid-December work session came weeks after a report
found that three of four new sections built at the port were not constructed
correctly, and due to shifting land, could fail during an earthquake.
The $2.2 million, 2,200-page sustainability study was
conducted by engineering firm CH2M Hill on behalf of the US Maritime
Administration (MARAD) and the US Army Corps of Engineers. It says the danger
comes mainly from a foundation system called Open Cell Sheet Pile, or OCSP,
where instead of building a traditional dock on piling, interlocking sheets of
steel are hammered into the sea floor to form U-shaped cells, which are then
backfilled with dirt and gravel.
Due to the problems, most construction of the project was
halted in 2010.
The Corps requested the study be conducted after it assumed
control of the Port of Anchorage expansion project from MARAD on May 31.
Officials from the port, Corps of Engineers and MARAD were
present during the study session. One option discussed over the course of the
three days was that two major port tenants, Horizon Lines and Totem Ocean
Trailer Express (TOTE), would remain at their current berths and that a new
deep water berth and a barge berth would be built after the damaged material
now there is removed.
Another option was the temporary movement of TOTE and
Horizon from their existing terminals while the old terminals are demolished
and rebuilt. A third, so-called hybrid option would be to replace two of the
existing terminals on the old dock and build a new deep-water berth.
The expansion, which has been in the works for more than a
decade, was originally estimated to cost $360 million, and was supposed to be
complete by 2011. Instead, cost estimates have jumped to more than $1 billion
and continue to climb. A completion date is at least a decade away, according
to port estimates.
Labels:
CH2M Hill,
Horizon Lines,
MarAd,
Port of Anchorage,
TOTE
Metro Vancouver Port Traffic Growth Continues
Canadian Port of Metro Vancouver’s monthly container volumes
have been strong throughout 2012, and that trend continued in November 2012,
with the facility’s terminals moving over 234,400 TEUs last month, raising the
Canadian port’s calendar year-to-date total to just under 2.5 million TEUs.
The port continues to have a robust year so far when it
comes to both full and empty container movement. The port saw almost 202,600
full TEUs in November, about 103,900 of which were inbound and over 98,700
outbound.
For the year to date, container terminals at the port have
moved a total of 2.02 million full TEUs, with 1.24 million of those being
imported into the country.
Regarding empty TEUs, Metro Vancouver saw about 31,700 last
month, more than 21,700 of which were outbound and 10,000 inbound. Through the
first 11 months of the calendar year, port terminals saw over 290,400 empty TEUs,
with about 200,000 of those being shipped out of the country.
Metro Vancouver’s total TEU volume was up 8.5 percent in the
first 11 months of 2012 compared to the same period in 2011, according to port
data.
Port Metro Vancouver is the largest port by container
traffic in Canada and fourth largest in North America, after the ports of Los Angeles,
Long Beach and New York/New Jersey.
Labels:
container volumes,
Port Metro Vancouver
Tacoma Port Continues Double Digit Monthly Growth
Port of Tacoma container volumes continued to see
double-digit growth in November 2012, marking a 13 percent improvement year to
date to over 1.5 million TEUs.
Tacoma terminals saw a total of 1.53 million TEUS through
the first 11 months of the calendar year, a 13.3 percent jump from the 1.35
million moved during the same period last year.
The port says demand for auto parts, furniture, toys, tires
and sporting goods helped drive full import container volumes up nearly 24
percent year to date through November to 545,242 TEUs. Meanwhile, agricultural
products and such bulk commodities as scrap paper and wood in the rough helped
export volumes improve 17 percent to 402,410 TEUs.
Last month saw a total of 147,565 TEUs travel through the
port, a 9.5 percent increase from November 2011’s 134,000 TEUs. The largest
portion of that amount was full inbound containers from overseas, of which the
port saw more than 54,400 during the month, up from 51,300 in the same month
last year.
The second-highest number of TEUs was in full outbound overseas
containers; Tacoma terminals saw about 42,400 of them in November, up from just
over 34,650 in November 2011. Overall, Tacoma moved about 947,650 containers to
and from overseas locations during the first 11 months of 2012, 1 21 percent
increase from the same period in 2011.
Labels:
container volumes,
Port of Tacoma
Oakland Monthly Container Volumes Dip
The total volume of containers shipped through the Port of
Oakland last month was about four-and-a-half percent lower than that of
November 2011, therefore continuing the port’s yearlong rollercoaster of up and
down monthly container volumes.
California’s third-busiest port saw a total of over 190,550 TEUs
last month, a decrease of 4.6 percent from the number Oakland moved during the
same month in 2011. It was the sixth month out of 11 so far during the calendar
year that volumes were down one percent of more compared with the same month
last year.
Oakland saw year-to-year declines in two of four cargo categories
during November: full imports and full exports. Full imports fell 7.0 percent
compared to November 2011, while full exports were down 8.5 percent. This was
the fifth non-consecutive month out of the year that Oakland experienced
declines in each category.
The news was better when it comes to empty TEUs, however:
port terminals saw a mild 2.0 percent rise in empty containers imported last
month and healthy 13.6 percent jump in the number of empty containers exported.
The shipment of empty containers through the port has been
relatively healthy at Oakland, with the port seeing volume increases in seven
of the first 11 months of the year.
For the calendar year-to-date, Oakland terminals have moved
a grand total of 2.14 million TEUs, a drop of 0.2 percent from the same 11-month
period in 2011.
Labels:
container volumes,
Port of Oakland
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Changing Requirements Keep Training Facilities Busy
By
Kathy A. Smith
Also under the new SCTW requirements, the terminology for AB and QMED will be
changing to Seafarer Deck and Seafarer Engine. Ellis says the Academy’s deck
program currently is serving 12 people, which approximates the number of
internships available. In engineering, most of the class interns with
Washington State Ferries or NOAA, and a variety of other shipping firms are
also available. “These are intense courses that really prepare the students to
go to work in the maritime industry.”
West Coast mariner training facilities continue to keep pace with ever-changing industry requirements for present and future mariners.
West Coast mariner training facilities continue to keep pace
with ever-changing industry requirements for present and future mariners.
The California Maritime Academy’s Steve Kreta, Associate Vice President
for Academic Affairs, says. “We’ve been anticipating the changes with regard to
ECDIS, maritime security, bridge team management and engine team management, so
we haven’t had to make any major changes to our curriculum. What’s new is
fatigue training. We have to make sure cadets and licensed graduates understand
the rules regarding rest, and we’ll be introducing those new requirements into
the curriculum.”
West Coast mariner training facilities continue to keep pace with ever-changing industry requirements for present and future mariners.
The
California Maritime Academy’s Steve Kreta, Associate Vice President for
Academic Affairs, says. “We’ve been anticipating the changes with regard to
ECDIS, maritime security, bridge team management and engine team management, so
we haven’t had to make any major changes to our curriculum. What’s new is
fatigue training. We have to make sure cadets and licensed graduates understand
the rules regarding rest, and we’ll be introducing those new requirements into
the curriculum.”
Another
new course the Academy is offering is part of the Master of Science,
Transportation and Engineering Management Masters Degree is Humanitarian Disaster
Management. “It’s for scenarios just like what is playing out in New York right
now,” says Kreta. “We’re excited about the program. I believe it is the only
Masters available in Humanitarian Management.”
Kreta
says enrollment has been steadily increasing, with numbers nearing 1,000
students, which he attributes to the fact that a lot of public colleges are
becoming more difficult to get into, so students are looking at different
career paths that they might not have thought of before. “We have a very high
employment rate at graduation,” he notes. The Academy’s graduate degree started
last September, and the first class of 18 students will graduate in May 2013.
Simulation
training is an integral part of the curriculum, and this past summer was the
first time the shipboard simulator on the Academy’s training ship the T/S
Golden Bear was fully functioning) Kreta explains. “The forward end allows our
upper class students to practice going into the various ports. For example, he
says, “The Port of LA is featured so students learn where the pilot boat would
meet us, how they would enter the port, what the port looks like, so upon
arrival in the real world, they would already have run that scenario. That has
proven to be a tremendous asset to our students.”
A
recently announced engineering requirement for US vessels transiting Canadian
waters en route to and from Canadian ports is also calling for changes to some
training programs. The US Coast Guard says effective October 26, 2013, Canada
will require vessels having a propulsive power of at least 1,000HP to perform
an engineering watch. Hence there will be certification changes to Designated
Duty Engineers.
“Our
preparation is going on right now so we can work on meeting the new demands,”
says Dr. Carl O. Ellis, Assistant Dean of the Seattle Maritime Academy. Ellis
reports spaces are quickly filling for the one-year engineering courses.
Orientation begins in January and could be closed by March for classes that
begin in September 2013. He says this is a great course for someone without any
sea time who wants to be an engineer on a vessel.
The
Academy’s new state-of-the-art facility is still on course for breaking ground
in July of 2013. “When that happens, it will be an extraordinary moment in the
maritime industry around here,” says Ellis.
Jon
Kjaerulff, President of Seattle-based Fremont Maritime Services says new SCTW
requirements will also affect basic safety and fire-fighting training. “Nothing
has changed yet,” he says, “but it looks like in the not-too-distant future the
rules will be published.”
Mariners
will likely no longer receive automatic renewal of Basic Safety Training simply
by documenting one year of sea time beyond the Boundary Line in the previous
five-year period. At the very least, they will have to complete one day of
practical survival refresher training, and one day of practical basic
fire-fighting training.
Mariners
without one year of sea time beyond the Boundary Line will still be required to
complete either the 5-day original or 3-day refresher Basic Safety Training,
which in addition to personal survival and fire-fighting, also cover first aid
and personal safety. In addition, licensed mariners who are required to have
advanced fire-fighting will probably require two days of advanced fire-fighting
refresher training every five years at the time of renewal.
“The
only course we will have to develop beyond what we already offer is the
advanced fire-fighting 2-day refresher,” says Kjaerulff. “As far as the 1-day
fire-fighting and survival courses, we already have a 3-day basic training
refresher class and would simply take out the first aid and personal safety and
social responsibilities day so it would become a 2-day refresher. There are
also indications in the Coast Guard policy letter that they may require refresher
training for proficiency in survival craft or lifeboatman but they don’t
indicate a frequency on that.”
Besides
the SCTW changes, another new industry change is on the horizon with regard to
lifeboat safety. As of January, 2013, IMO regulations via SOLAS Chapter III/1.5
will see hook manufacturers testing their hooks, now called release and
retrieval systems, against new criteria intended to dramatically improve
safety.
Hooks
that don’t meet the criteria must be replaced on ships at their first drydocking
after July 1, 2014 and no later than July 1, 2019. Captain Pat Boyle, Director
of Training and Certification for the Anacortes, Washington-based Q3 Marine
Training says, “We haven’t seen any effect on our enrollment just yet, but we
do see companies rehooking in advance of the July 1, 2014 to July 1, 2019
period.”
Boyle
says there are some 70 manufacturers on the market, which has made dealing with
lifeboat hooks complicated for the mariner. “Hopefully, after the new hooks are
introduced, mariners should only have to work with a dozen or so from ship to
ship during their career,” he says. “We anticipate an increase in training
activity as shipowners will have this as an unavoidable cost.”
Also
adjusting to new SCTW requirements, Q3 will be running their first Able Body
Seaman course in December. “We can capture mariners right when they’re being
certified to work, so we can introduce them to the proper methodologies of
lifeboat use.”
“We
always emphasize safety concerns in operating lifeboat davits,” adds Julie
Keim, owner of Compass Courses located in Edmonds, Washington. “There have been
so many accidents and even deaths during lifeboat drills. Lifesaving equipment
should have as few inherent risks as possible, and these new regulations are
working toward that goal.”
Keim
says Compass Courses’ current numbers are on track with the 1,100 mariners the
company trained in 2011. “We are seeing an uptick in the fourth quarter though,
and we attribute that to the looming changes in fishing regulations and a general
shift in safety culture. We are also busy gearing up for the 2013 Crowley
Safety Program Basic Safety Training Refresher class which will see around 600
crew.”
Compass
Courses is also adjusting their courses to meet the SCTW Manila amendments.
Additionally, they’ve added a 2-day Apprentice Mate (Steersman), 4-day Upgrade
Master 100 Ton to Master 200 Ton, Fishing Vessel Drill Instructor and
Assistance Towing to their long-established training courses. They are also
joining forces with The Anchor Program (a non-profit service organization that
provides vocational and life skills training to youth and others interested in
pursuing careers in the maritime industry), and starting in 2013, the school
will be offering a new four-week QMED course.”
Even
students as young as age 15 who enter Seattle’s Ballard Maritime Academy (BMA),
part of Ballard High School, are now starting to get familiar with SCTW
requirements. “This year we’ll be taking a group of students through the full
SCTW Basic Safety Training course because it’s the minimum certification
they’re going to need doing anything on a vessel,” says Lead Instructor John
Foster. “We do part of the training here, and the second part is done at
California Maritime Academy.” During the training in California, the students
will share dorms, eat cafeteria food, and use the facilities to carry out their
water safety exercises in order to get real-world certification. “It not only
teaches them how to be safe, but also about how to get along with people in
shipboard environments,” he adds.
Foster
explains senior students have two options with BMA; one is an oceanography 101
course that is a college-equivalent high school course they can use for college
credits, and on the maritime side, they can take an Operator Uninspected
Passenger Vessel (OUPV) license course, a base entry-level Coast Guard license
exam. “If students are interested in a career, this is the first level of
training,” he says. “It teaches them the rules of the road, deck operations,
standing watch, how to get and maintain a license and what training you need.
Most won’t have sea time yet, but this is a good introduction on how Coast
Guard exams and licensing work, and gives them a chance to start a career a lot
earlier.”
Juniors
also play engineer-for-a-day and go down to Northwest Seaport and see the
progress of technology on ships like the historic Virginia V steamship and the
Arthur Foss Washington diesel vessel. Foster is also excited to be working with
NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service on a history project where some of the
students are interviewing old-time fishermen to get their stories of
years-gone-by.
“One
of the great things that has happened is we have students who are graduating
from maritime schools and getting jobs and making good money. These kids are
coming back and telling their stories,” he continues. “It’s good for the
students to hear it from someone who’s closer in age to them, that way it’s
much more valuable and relevant to them.”
The
Northwest Center of Excellence for Marine Manufacturing & Technology, part
of Skagit Valley College, has been seeing a flock of new students as new
fisheries legislation recently introduced could see some two to four hundred
new boats required to be built, according to Director Ann Avary. “Clearly the
State of Washington has a very robust shipbuilding component, and I think one
of the exciting things about that is not only the jobs that it will create but
the demand for very specific types of training around ship fitting, so if you
know your way around electronics, electrical, corrosion, HVAC and that type
technology, there really are jobs out there waiting for you.”
Avary
says the increase in enrollment is a wonderful problem to have. “We are at a
point where we are trying to manage this growth that’s occurring. We have a
second section in one of our composites course that we’ve never had before. We
could very well be in a position where we are having to offer second sessions
again of some courses.”
Generally,
the Marine Technology courses are 10 weeks long, and there are one and two-year
options in the program. For instance, students doing the one-year track would
get a marine technology certificate from Skagit Valley College. And at the end
of the academic year, they can sit for a number of credentialing exams that are
nationally and sometimes internationally recognized by the industry.
Paid
internships are also part of the curriculum, plus the college program also has
industry experts come in and give presentations. Additionally, those working in
the field often return to take additional courses. “We do a fair amount of
incumbent employee training,” says Avary. “The use of materials, design
processes and the technical competencies are going to continue to evolve. We
are going to see technology areas grow exponentially in the next five years.”
In
July, PMI-MITAGS’ Workboat Academy located in Seattle, was awarded the
Registered Apprenticeship Innovator and Trailblazer for PMI’s Apprenticeship
Program, in recognition of the 75th Anniversary of the National Apprenticeship
Act by the US Dept. of Labor. “This award recognizes apprenticeships across all
trades,” says Glen Paine, Executive Director of PMI-MITAGS. “Upon graduation,
more than 90 percent of students are staying with the company they apprentice
with and more than 98 percent since 2005 are still working in the industry.”
Workboat
Academy Assistant Director Marja van Pietersom says the two-year program covers
academic, sea phases as well as simulator phases. “We hit them four times with
the same information (classroom, simulator, on-board training, on-board
assessment) so they really understand how to apply what they learn in the
field. We also get together with our now 31 partner companies to discuss what
we can do to enhance the program based on what’s happening in the industry.”
During
final exams, students are observed in the Academy’s simulator by
representatives of the company they’ve been apprenticing with. “We call it the
second interview,” says van Pietersom. Paine reports the Academy has invested
heavily in their simulator in order to keep improving on technology for better
assessments. “People really believe they’re at sea when in the simulator.”
The
Academy has also been very successful in readying people in the military who
are transitioning careers. Together PMI-MITAGS issues 6,000 certificates a
year. Additionally, adds Paine, “College credits are also given. Students can
get a B.A. or Masters, which is a great value-added option that is really
helpful for their transition to a shore position.”
POLB November Container Volumes Up Sharply
Despite a labor strike that wiped out a handful of days of
productivity, container volumes at the Port of Long Beach rose steeply in
November 2012, with imports up 20.2 percent and exports up 24.6 percent
compared to the same month the previous year.
Port terminals handled 555,513 TEUs overall, an increase of
20.8 percent from November 2011, according to POLB data. This was despite a
strike by International Longshore and Warehouse Union clerks that began Nov. 27
and lasted eight days.
The rise in container traffic came as more ocean carriers
added services to Long Beach in recent months, including CMA CGM and MSC, two
of the world’s largest container shipping companies.
Import container traffic rose to 278,534 TEUs, the highest
November volume in five years. Export container traffic rose to 138,312 TEUs,
the second highest November volume in five years. Empty container volumes rose
18.4 percent from a year ago to 138,667 TEUs. With imports exceeding exports,
empty containers are sent overseas to be refilled with goods.
After mostly declining traffic in the middle of the year,
the late boost has helped bring port cargo volumes closer to 2011 levels. For
the first 11 months of the year, imports were virtually flat compared to the
same period a year ago, down 0.3 percent, and exports were up two percent.
Overall container volumes were down 1.2 percent through November due mainly to
a decline in empty container traffic, which was down 5.9 percent in the same
period.
For the fiscal year to date however, the numbers have
improved compared to last year. The number of loaded inbound, loaded outbound
and empty containers shipped rose 17.6 percent, 18.5 percent and 5.1 percent,
respectively, from the same period in 2011.
For FY 2012-2013, which began Oct. 1, Long Beach terminals
have moved a total of 1.08 million TEUs so far, a 14.6 percent improvement over
the same two months last year.
Labels:
container volumes,
Port of Long Beach
Portland Security Contract Ratified
The Port of Portland Commission has unanimously approved a
four-year collective bargaining agreement between the port and the marine
security officers of International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 28, officially
bringing an end to the possibility of a strike.
Local 28 represents 25 officers who work at marine terminals
2, 4 and 6; it reached a tentative agreement with the port just hours before a
strike deadline in late November, and then ratified the agreement Dec. 4.
It was over a year and a half ago that the port and the
union entered into collective bargaining to replace the agreement that was to
expire on June 30, 2011. After holding 10 bargaining sessions between June 2011
and March 2012, and three mediation sessions between May and October of 2012,
the parties reached impasse and submitted their final offers in late October.
A tentative agreement was reached on the evening of Nov. 24,
during a six-hour mediation session led by State Conciliator Bob Nightingale.
“The goal throughout the negotiations was to ensure a fair
contract for our workers and minimize impacts to our customers,” Port of
Portland Executive Director Bill Wyatt said in a prepared statement.
The new contract covers wages, benefits and working
conditions and prevents the outsourcing of jobs at two of the port’s three
marine terminals, according to the union. Although it covers four years, the
contract’s retroactive to the end of the previous pact, meaning it expires at
the end of June 2015.
A separate federal mediation process involving negotiations
between the ILWU and the Pacific Northwest Grain Handlers Association is also
ongoing. One of the six association members is a tenant at Terminal 5, but the port
is not involved in those negotiations.
Labels:
ILWU Local 28,
Port of Portland
LA Container Traffic Dives in November
Overall container volumes at the Port of Los Angeles decreased
16 percent in November 2012 compared to the same month last year, according to recently
released port data.
The decrease, the port says, was due in part to a vessel
service shift from Los Angeles to the Port of Long Beach and to cargo delays
related to the initial days of a labor dispute.
Port traffic was seriously curtailed in late November due to
an eight-day strike by International Longshore and Warehouse Union clerks that
began Nov. 27. During the strike, container movement came to a standstill at
nearly all POLA terminals.
Total container imports at LA terminals decreased 18.6
percent last month, falling from 354,313 TEUs in November 2011 to 288,273 TEUs
this November, according to the data.
Additionally, exports fell a whopping 25.8 percent, dropping
from 195,877 TEUs in November 2011 to 145,344 TEUs in November 2012.
Combined, total loaded imports and exports for November fell
21.1 percent, from 550,190 TEUs last November to 433,617 TEUs in November 2012.
Factoring in empties, which increased 3.78 percent year over year, overall the November
2012 total volume of 582,981 TEUs was a 16 percent drop compared to November
2011’s 694,108 TEUs.
For the first 11 months of the calendar year however,
overall container volumes have increased 2.7 percent to 7.48 million TEUs
compared with the 7.29 million TEUs that were shipped by port terminals during
the same period in 2011.
For the 2012-2013 fiscal year, which began July 1, traffic
volumes are down a combined 1.26 percent from the same five months during the
previous fiscal year, according to port data.
Labels:
container volumes,
Port of Long Beach