LA port sees record cargo in 2021 despite trade snarls

 

Bloomberg

The Port of Los Angeles moved record cargo volumes last year amid an import surge at the U.S.’s biggest container gateway and supply-chain snarls brought on by the pandemic.
The West Coast port handled 10.7 million 20-foot container units in 2021, 13% more volume than in 2018, the previous record year, Executive Director Gene Seroka said.
US supply chains have strained under unprecedented demand, worker and truck-chassis shortages and a shift to buying more material goods as Americans avoided travel and social outings over the course of the pandemic.
Neighbouring Port of Long Beach also hit a record this year, moving 9.38 million 20-foot equivalent units last year, almost 16% more than a year earlier, it said Wednesday. And further north at Oakland — the preferred export gateway for California’s agricultural exporters and for refrigerated proteins — import volumes surged to the highest in the port’s 94-year history, it said.
Los Angeles and Long Beach received record inbound shipments in 2021 and despite efforts by the ports and the Biden administration, delays continue at two operations, which handle about 40% of the US’s inbound containers.
The recently passed bipartisan infrastructure law contains $17 billion for ports and inland waterways, and the US Army announced plans to invest more than $14 billion for upgrades to shore up against threats from climate change.
Earlier this month, Governor Gavin Newsom designated $2.3 billion in the California budget that would go towards addressing the shortage of commercial truckers and increasing capacity on railroads and other ports improvements.

Seroka said dollars for the Los Angeles port would go toward enhancing digital and cyber-security infrastructure as well as for freight improvements. The investments will also help develop zero-emissions port-drayage systems and workforce training, he said.
Seroka highlighted the need for better inter-connectivity of ports across the US, similar to the electrical grid or air-traffic control system. The Biden administration is working with the industry a national port-data initiative “that will help keep our supply chain moving,” he said.
“Data can help us untangle the complexity of the global supply chain,” he said. “Shared data makes us all more competitive, and we owe it to our nation to make that happen.”

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend