Started By
Message

The busiest port in America is no longer on the West Coast

Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:01 am
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
118995 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:01 am
quote:

For the past 22 years, the Port of Los Angeles has been the busiest container port in North America, moving around 10 million cargo containers filled with goods for Americans and bringing in roughly half a billion dollars in revenue each year to the state of California. But for the past three months, the Port of New York and New Jersey has been No. 1.

This rerouting of the US supply chain is a bid to get goods to consumers faster and cheaper. The vast majority of foreign-made goods, from furniture and apparel to auto parts, all come to the United States on cargo vessels that unload at US Ports.

LA isn’t happy about losing its title to its cross-country rival.

“We’ve got to get that cargo back,” said Gene Seroka, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles, in a recent press briefing.

Since August, imports into the two major West Coast ports — Los Angeles and Long Beach — have declined. Cargo volume at the Port of Los Angeles is down by 25% in the last three months compared to last year, and down by 17.3% on the five-year average. That cargo is now flowing into Gulf Coast ports like Savannah and New Orleans, and East Coast ports in New York and New Jersey.

“The record levels of cargo continue,” said Rick Cotton, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, at a press briefing last month.

“Our goal is to keep as much of that business as possible,” said a spokesperson from the Port of New York and New Jersey.

The shift stems from fears about an unresolved labor contract between the International Longshore & Warehouse Union (ILWU) and the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA). Around 20,000 dockworkers at West Coast ports, including Los Angeles and Long Beach, have been working without a contract since July 1. Retailers are nervous that the lingering negotiations could lead to a strike, despite reassurances from both parties that this won’t happen. A US freight rail strike nearly sent the US economy into a supply chain spiral — raising the stakes for what a port strike could do. A dockworker strike, which both labor parties say they are adamant about avoiding, would cripple the West Coast and US supply chain — sending even more volume and pressure to other — smaller – East and Gulf Coast ports.


LINK
Posted by terd ferguson
Darren Wilson Fan Club President
Member since Aug 2007
108776 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:02 am to
quote:

“We’ve got to get that cargo back,” said Gene Seroka, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles


You did it to yourself you stupid frick
Posted by H2O Tiger
Delta Sky Club
Member since May 2021
6637 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:04 am to
quote:

You did it to yourself you stupid frick


Lets have stuff sit on boats for weeks because we can't get anybody willing to unload them and then cry when people stop shipping goods through us.
Posted by CarRamrod
Spurbury, VT
Member since Dec 2006
57472 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:05 am to
theres a race in Louisiana to get some of this share too. Port of Plaquemines and Port of New Orleans are in a race right now.
Posted by Codythetiger
Arkansas
Member since Nov 2006
27614 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:05 am to
weeks?

Try months

they sat so damn long they went home

these people have 0 perceptions of the problems they face and cause
Posted by CarRamrod
Spurbury, VT
Member since Dec 2006
57472 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:06 am to
quote:

because we can't get anybody willing to unload them
thats the lie. there was plenty of people willing to work.
Posted by LSUBoo
Knoxville, TN
Member since Mar 2006
101930 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:07 am to
quote:

That cargo is now flowing into Gulf Coast ports like Savannah and New Orleans


Did Savannah relocate?
Posted by Chad504boy
4 posts
Member since Feb 2005
166482 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:08 am to
quote:

You did it to yourself you stupid frick
Posted by MrLSU
Yellowstone, Val d'isere
Member since Jan 2004
26034 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:08 am to
No one wants to ship to Long Beach and LA because of all the restrictions California imposed which has caused thieves to steal everything not locked down due to the delays in getting those goods out of the port and railways.

I don't see them ever getting that business back.
Posted by Tyga Woods
South Central Jupiter Island, FL
Member since Sep 2016
30345 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:09 am to
quote:

Gulf Coast ports like Savannah


Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
118995 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:10 am to
quote:

Did Savannah relocate?


Obvious mistake or the author is geographically challenged. But the mistake is not so bad it ruins the entire article.
Posted by SlickRickerz
Member since Oct 2018
2290 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:11 am to
Have they started dredging the Mississippi to accommodate the new size shipping containers ships? I know New York had to raise a bridge and have been preparing.
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
118995 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:14 am to
quote:

No one wants to ship to Long Beach and LA because of all the restrictions California imposed which has caused thieves to steal everything not locked down due to the delays in getting those goods out of the port and railways.



I wonder if shipping companies with ships coming from Asia discovered that shipping to the US east coast is just as fuel efficient as shipping to the US west coast despite being slightly shorter in travel distance due to not having to travel against the trade winds.
Posted by AllDayEveryDay
Nawf Tejas
Member since Jun 2015
7073 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:14 am to
A lack of cargo logistics software update, lack of procedural update, increase in environmental regulations on diesel trucks, increase in container decon to name a few. California gonna California.

frick em.
Posted by VermilionTiger
Member since Dec 2012
37606 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:14 am to
quote:

Have they started dredging the Mississippi


Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
118995 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:15 am to
quote:

Have they started dredging the Mississippi to accommodate the new size shipping containers ships?


IDK. What is the requirement? 70 feet?
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:18 am to
quote:

I wonder if shipping companies with ships coming from Asia discovered that shipping to the US east coast is just as fuel efficient as shipping to the US west coast despite being slightly shorter in travel distance due to not having to travel against the trade winds.



Takes a hell of a lot longer to get from Asia to the East Coast due to having to go through the Panama Canal, through the Caribbean, then up the East Coast
Posted by tadman
Member since Jun 2020
3844 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:18 am to
This is very interesting. Much as I don't like California politics, the LA port is a marvel of efficiency, and NJ is not in the top five in terms of technology. Tells you just how screwed up the global supply chain is.
Posted by Richard Grayson
Bestbank
Member since Sep 2022
2149 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:19 am to
quote:

theres a race in Louisiana to get some of this share too. Port of Plaquemines and Port of New Orleans are in a race right now.


Louisiana should be a major shipping hub but instead we’re fricking retarded
Posted by glassman
Next to the beer taps at Finn's
Member since Oct 2008
116170 posts
Posted on 12/9/22 at 11:23 am to
quote:

Louisiana should be a major shipping hub but instead we’re fricking retarded




We are in the export side of things.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 4Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram