Shipping
ZIM signs long-term charter deals for 10 LNG-powered 11,500-TEU vessels
ZIM signs long-term charter deals for 10 LNG-powered 11,500-TEU vessels
Georgia Ports’ container trade grew 22.5% in March
CMA CGM inks AI deal with Mistral AI
Port of New York and New Jersey reports second-busiest February
Maersk's APM Terminals acquires Panama Canal Railway Company
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Hapag-Lloyd makes Philippine inaugural at ICTSI Manila
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WorldACD: Global air cargo rates rise as post-NY market rebounds
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SATS partners with Guangtai to innovate ground support technology
SC Port's Inland Port Greer expands capacity by 50%
Hong Kong exporters remain positive despite growing trade tensions
Singapore opens applications for methanol bunkering licence
Tariff turmoil persists, though ocean freight rates continue to decline
UN agencies express grave concern over increased satellite interference
Baltic Hub welcomes multiple new services
Port of Savannah achieves busiest February on record
UK freight association seeks solutions to uninsured cargo
Rotterdam, Singapore boost green, digital shipping partnership
MSC announces standalone East/West network
Singapore, India ink deal to boost maritime digitalisation, decarbonisation
World Shipping Council calls on the U.S. to drop its planned port fees
Port of NY/NJ secures landmark lease extension with APM Terminals
Container rates slip amid signs of overcapacity
SC Ports expands weekly services with new ocean carrier deployments
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Tianjin Port eyes increased container throughput to 35M TEUs by 2035
ILA-USMX officially sign six-year port contract through 2030
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Singapore launches new standard on methanol bunkering
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DP World and Mawani inaugurate US$800M terminal in Jeddah
CMA CGM to invest US$1B for new Chicago air cargo hub
Trump halts Canada, Mexico tariffs again for another month
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CK Hutchison sells int'l ports business to BlackRock, MSC for US$22.8B
CMA CGM's first dual-fuel methanol vessel makes maiden call at Singapore
Alibaba, Maersk partner on container shipping services
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Port of New York and New Jersey records third busiest January ever
Viasea Shipping relaunches London Thamesport service
Sea-Intel notes volume shift from East to West Coast in H2 2024
Port of Savannah receives largest capacity vessel in its history
ILA ratifies new labour contract at US East, Gulf Coast ports
Sea-Intel: 2024 global schedule reliability trend continuing in 2025
Savannah tagged as fastest growing port on the U.S. East Coast
ICTSI's MCT increases renewable energy utilization
DCSA releases final versions of Booking 2.0, Bill of Lading 3.0 standards
Port Klang launches Kale's Malaysia Maritime Single Window
Port of Hamburg reports growth in container throughput, rail transport
Port of Salalah invests US$300M to meet new Gemini Cooperation needs
ONE adopts DCSA eBL standards using GSBN blockchain
Asia-Europe demand to drop once supply chains return to normal
SC Ports welcomes largest vessel to call Port of Charleston
ONE, Yusen Logistics partner on sustainable shipping solutions
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Evergreen orders 11 mega-size containerships worth US$3.2B
PSA Ventures, NIDLP partner on port automation, sustainability
DP World Sokhna handles inaugural vehicle export
ONE names first owned and operated newbuilding container vessel
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Regional container trade imbalances increase 33%
Yang Ming enhances JKX service with Haiphong extension
Singapore, Indonesia extends human resources development partnership
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ONE, LX Pantos announce intermodal transport joint venture
Port of New York and New Jersey records third-busiest year ever in 2024
ICTSI flagship terminal receives Philippines’ first near-zero emission RTGs
ONE raises full-year profit guidance in 2024
Gemini Cooperation launches operations
VICT in Melbourne invests in new hybrid carriers to raise capacity, reduce emissions
Port of Savannah reports 12th consecutive month of container volume growth
Global shipping schedule reliability in 2024 largely within 50%-55%
Chapman Freeborn eyes further growth in China air cargo charters
CMA CGM, Maersk to keep Cape of Good Hope sailings despite Red Sea tensions easing
Blank sailings, Trump tariffs may buffer spot rates from hard landing
DP World, NSW Ports invest A$400M to expand rail capacity at Port Botany
Red Sea crisis “not the sole reason” for higher ship operating costs
HMM signs MoU to develop India's Vadhvan port
Trump delays tariffs on Inauguration Day but issues new threats to China, the EU
PSA unboXed rebranded as PSA Ventures
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Port of Long Beach reports record 2024 cargo volume
China's Ningbo-Zhoushan Port maintains title as top port for cargo volume
U.S. proposes new rules for the entry of low-value shipments
Port of Savannah reduces transit time for Indian cargo
PSA hits 100 million TEUs milestone for the first time
Singapore reports record growth in container throughput, gross tonnage for 2024
deugro transports equipment for Europe’s most sustainable ethane cracker
Rebuilding efforts from devastating L.A. fires could impact container volumes
Seafrigo opens in Vietnam
OOCL to launch another 6,828 TEU ship on the Transpacific trade
Air cargo industry records 14th months of growth, but 2025 outlook cautiously optimistic as risks remain
Maersk halts port surcharges as strike threats end
Air Canada Cargo expands capacity in key Asian markets
ARE OFFSHORE PORTS THE FUTURE IN US SEA TRADE?
December 1, 2014
Khalifa Port Abu Dhabi
The design of US offshore ports will owe much to the Bechtel-managed construction of the US$5 billion deep water Khalifa Port in Abu Dhabi, which opened in 2012. (Photo: Abu Dhabi Ports Company)

Offshore ports a few miles from the mainland could become the new basis of the US maritime commerce system, making the Suez Canal the main artery for the East Coast from China and hammering the traditional gateways of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

Construction and infrastructure multinational Bechtel has garnered interest from both the private sector and the federal government for setting up the ports. Termed Multi-user Offshore Hubs, they will be able to take 18,000+ teu vessels while also being suitable for bulk cargo. Goods will be transshipped to barges and smaller vessels (probably 10,000 teu) for offloading at the mainland.

A senior executive behind the proposal, Marco Pluijm, ports and marine sector manager for Bechtel, tells Asia Cargo News: “We are currently in initial discussions with several US government agencies about the development of offshore ports along the US coast, primarily for handling containers but with options for dry bulk as well. The most likely locations are the New York/New Jersey/Baltimore area and the Gulf Coast region, with the distance offshore depending on legislation and physical conditions, such as water depth. The current focus is on the technical and financial feasibility.”

The design of the ports will owe much to the Bechtel-managed construction of the US$5 billion deep water Khalifa Port and Khalifa Industrial Zone in Abu Dhabi, which opened in 2012. Khalifa is about 4.5 kilometers offshore, connected to the mainland by a causeway and bridge, with capacity rising from the existing 2 million to 4 million teu. “There are many similarities in terms of port and terminal operations as well as scale, “says Bechtel.

“We have had interest from third-parties including marine contractors, platform operators and terminal operators. Terminal operators in existing ports are also interested in the concept as they will not need to keep on investing in significant upgrades of their  existing facilities and make a leap forward and  play a major role in the ongoing  operations, including providing a short sea shipping or barging link to the offshore port.”

The core of Bechtel’s strategy is huge savings in construction and overland transportation costs. A big advantage in offshore construction is avoiding dredging and associated works, which can account for up to 15% of capital costs. “Shifting containers from overland transport to all-water, directly imported via the Suez Canal could save 20-30% on direct freight costs from the Far East to the US East Coast due to the all-water economy of larger-scale shipping,” says Pluijm. 

“We estimate that it could also save between 30 to 40% (or even more) on direct freight costs due to a 40-50% shorter overland transport distance in the US itself,” he says. “And 20-30% lower emissions on the all-water route (lower fuel consumption, more efficient engines) plus 40-50% reduction in overland emissions.”

Bechtel estimates that 70% of all containers offloaded on the West Coast are destined for the interior of the country, while up to 20% (4 million teu) go all the way to the East Coast. The New York/Baltimore hub would have a maximum throughput of 4 million teu a year and the Gulf Coast hub about 3 million teu.

The initial size of each hub will be 1,600 metres long and 300-400 metres wide. “For containers, the offshore hub would consist of a smart terminal arrangement of two or three berths for the main carriers and four or five for barges to nearby ports and coastal shipping, “says Pluijm. “The facilities can be extended in almost any combination with dry bulk, wet bulk and containers, depending on zoning and safety requirements.”

As with Khalifa, automation will be key to operational and financial success. (Khalifa has 30 automated stacking cranes and automated gate control.) “The degree of automation on the offshore terminal is planned to be high in order to minimize the size of the platform, maintaining maximum throughput, while the containers are being shipped to and from the offshore hub to nearby coastal ports or inland-river hubs,” says Pluijm.

Inevitably, this leads to speculation about where the source of recruitment will be for the jobs available. Bechtel is saying nothing about the issue, but many in the industry hope that this could be a way to cut through the control over labour exercised by trade unions at US ports. Non-union, contract staff could be employed without encroaching on the authority of the unions at the mainland ports.

 

By Martin Rushmere

Correspondent | San Francisco