Shipping
DHL says tariff extension fuels more transpacific shipping volatility than help
DHL says tariff extension fuels more transpacific shipping volatility than help
Yang Ming adds LNG dual-fuel ships to advance fleet upgrade
Port of Long Beach cargo slows in June
Chinese shipyards’ market share drops amid US port fee concerns
Emirates Courier Express expands to Australia
DP World, Asian Terminals deploy first fleet of electric internal transfer vehicles in the Philippines
Houthis cause 18M tons of added CO2 emissions – Sea Intelligence
DHL Express, Neste ink deal to use made-in-Singapore SAF for international flights
Container traffic up at Port of Antwerp-Bruges, total throughput drops
Port of Los Angeles logs busiest June for cargo on record
DaChan Bay Terminals adds India service, boosts China-India logistics corridor
DP World to develop Syria's Tartus port under 30-year deal
Port of Long Beach terminal expansion breaks ground
Singapore named top international maritime centre for 12th straight year
North Europe port congestion to persist through 2025 – Xeneta
US sets new tariff rates on 14 countries as it moved deadline to August 1
Hamburg invests €1.1B in port infrastructure expansion
Gemini switches up Asia service amid Europe's port congestion
Global schedule reliability climbed in May despite trade disruptions
Asia-NAWC capacity volatility more than triples
Containers lost at sea up more than double in 2024
Hong Kong launches up to HK$2M bunkering incentive for LNG, methanol
Sea-Intel finds top deep-sea ports among least reliable
Port of NY/NJ tops US cargo port rankings in May
Maersk to resume port calls in Haifa
Ningbo-Zhoushan Port sets H1 container record
Mawani privatizes cargo terminals at 8 Saudi Ports
BIMCO: Stable demand outlook despite market uncertainties
Hapag-Lloyd rebrands SAAM Terminals
Port of Savannah achieves third month of over half-million TEUs
CMA CGM names Esra Bora as new general manager in China
Maersk halts port calls at Haifa citing threat risks
First mega-boxship transits the Suez Canal in 15 months
ONE adds 13,900 TEU vessel to fleet
Freightos: Iran-Israel conflict not impacting freight yet
CMA CGM says shipping activities ‘proceeding as normal’ in the Middle East
Sea-Intel: Niche carriers seizing Transpacific opportunity again
Hong Kong marks first SIMOPS LNG bunkering at Modern Terminals
Tariffs put brake on cargo volume growth at Port of Los Angeles
MPA, NYK Group expand autonomous ship trials
PSA International joins Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation
Chengdu-Shenzhen-Hong Kong rail-sea service launches
Global schedule reliability continues to increase in 2025
Sea-Intel: Major ocean carriers profitability around US$5.9B in Q1 2024
Gebrüder Weiss expands into Thailand
DP World, VIMC Lines launch domestic coastal logistics service
Singapore, France ink enhanced maritime partnership agreement
CMA CGM launches first fully-electric container barge in Vietnam
MSC container ship sinks off India coast
Port of Savannah container trade up 17% in April
DP World to launch US$2.5B logistics infrastructure investment in 2025
Port of Long Beach sees record April, warns of sharp May drop amid tariff impact
Suez Canal introduces rebates to regain containership traffic
CMA CGM warns extended China-US tariffs could disrupt global trade
U.S. slashes ‘de minimis’ tariff on small China parcels to 30%
LA, Long Beach ports warn of continued tariff uncertainty
China-US deescalation may spur early peak season
Yang Ming: US-China trade deal may spur demand, but uncertainty persists
US-China tariff pause offers temporary relief, could fuel another frontloading rush
Transpacific shipping faces capacity cuts as trade war escalates
Houthi ceasefire raises prospect of container traffic returning to Red Sea
Kale Logistics to develop Oman's national port community system
PSA BDP takes majority stake in Mexico’s ED Forwarding
Xeneta: ‘Ships for America Act’ adds more uncertainty to container shipping market
JAFZA marks 40 years with record US$190B in trade
Seafrigo expands multi-modal services to support global expansion
US port fees to have minimal impact on Transpacific niche carriers
Port fo NY/NJ is busiest US port in March
S&P: Liner shipping contributes US$1.1T to U.S. GDP
deugro Thailand delivers critical reactors for sustainable fuel production
Emirates Shipping Line joins World Shipping Council
Japanese shipyards may benefit from US port fees on Chinese vessels
MOL opens office in Washington, D.C.
Red Sea disruptions push shipping carbon emissions to record high in 2024
Port of LA expects a double-digit volume decline in the second half amid tariffs
DP World sources 65% of its electricity from renewables in 2024
Hapag-Lloyd: 30% of China’s US-bound shipments canceled
US PASSES OCEAN SHIPPING REFORM ACT
June 14, 2022

The US Congress approved on Monday the Ocean Shipping Reform Act which the American government expects to help ease export backlogs in the country's major ports.

 

President Joe Biden lauded the passage of the bill following the approval in the House of Representatives as it now heads to the White House for his signature. 

 

The US Senate already approved the measure last March.

 

Among others, the bill would give the Federal Maritime Commission (FMC), the US agency in charge of ocean shipping, more investigative power and promote business openness.

 

This means that it would allow the FMC to investigate ocean common carriers' business practices and take enforcement action, as well as require ocean common carriers to report "total import/export tonnage" to the FMC every calendar quarter.

 

It also sought to level the playing field for American farmers, exporters, and consumers by making it harder for ocean carriers to refuse goods that are ready to export at US ports.

 

"Lowering prices for Americans is my top priority, and I applaud the Congress for passing the Ocean Shipping Reform Act on a bipartisan basis, which will help lower costs for American retailers, farmers, and consumers," Biden said in a statement.

 

The US President noted that this is a means to "address ocean carriers' high prices and unfair practices," as he noted that rising ocean shipping costs are a "major contributing factor" to inflation in the country which recently hit 8.6% — the highest since 1981.

 

"I look forward to signing it into law," Biden said.

 

Ocean carriers respond

 

Responding to the passage of the Ocean Shipping Reform Act, the World Shipping Council (WSC) — the primary industry trade association representing the international liner shipping industry — noted that despite claims against ocean carriers, they have gone "all-out" throughout the Covid-19 pandemic to keep goods moving.

 

"We are appalled by the continued mischaracterization of the industry by US government representatives, and concerned about the disconnect between hard data and inflammatory rhetoric. The 22 (not nine) international carriers that serve the American people, industry, and government in the Asia - United States trade are part of the global supply chain that has built this country, importing and exporting food, medicine, electronics, chemicals, and everything else we depend on," WSC said.

 

The trade association with members including the world's biggest ocean carriers such as MSC, Maersk, CMA CGM, the COSCO Group, Hapag-Lloyd, among others, said the increased freight rates were due to "demand outstripping supply" and landside congestion, calling for a commitment to invest in landside logistics infrastructure "exacerbated by pandemic-related disruption."

 

"Until the import congestion is remedied, export congestion will persist," WSC added, noting that the association will continue to work with federal and state policymakers, as well as other parties, to pursue the necessary lasting solutions – such as continued investment in port infrastructure.

 

WSC said this can have a "real impact" in strengthening the intermodal transportation system that has supported the US economy through the pandemic.

 

"As long as America's ports, railyard, and warehouses remain overloaded and unable to cope with the increased trade levels, vessels will remain stuck outside ports to the detriment of importers as well as exporters," it said.

 

"Ocean carriers continue to move record volumes of cargo and have invested heavily in new capacity – America needs to make the same commitment and invest in its landside logistics infrastructure," the trade association added.

 

WSC said in 2021 alone, carriers ordered 555 vessels worth US$42.5 billion, and 208 vessels worth US$18.4 billion have been ordered year-to-date in 2022.

 

Last March, WSC noted that the Ocean Shipping Reform Act will only make congestion worse as they also hit President Biden's "planned attack" on ocean carriers in his State of the Union Address earlier that month.