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GEORGIA PORTS EXPANDING REFRIGERATED CONTAINER CAPACITY
January 31, 2023
The Georgia Ports Authority is increasing chilled cargo capacity to stay ahead of anticipated growth in demand.
 
"Expansion among our cold storage partners in the Savannah market will drive greater volumes of chilled cargo crossing our docks," said Griff Lynch, GPA executive director.
 
"While the Port of Savannah already accommodates the most refrigerated containers on the South Atlantic and Gulf coasts, enhancing our on-terminal capacity will better support the jobs and opportunity sparked by private investment," he added.
 
Increased cold chain demand 
 
Private chilled and frozen warehouse space in Savannah is set to grow by 11% in 2023 to more than 2.2 million square feet.
 
The GPA board approved the construction of seven additional refrigerated container racks at the Port of Savannah.
 
The US$6.2 million project will grow the number of slots for cold cargo to 3,506 at Garden City Terminal, counting chassis plug-ins. Savannah's Ocean Terminal provides another 368 refrigerated container plugs.
 
GPA noted that chilled and frozen products handled at the Port of Savannah range from proteins such as poultry and seafood to blueberries, avocados, citrus, stone fruits and onions, among other commodities.
 
GPA noted that its fastest-growing cold chain exports in 2022 were poultry, beef, fish fillets, candy and frozen vegetables. Top performing chilled imports were grapes, vegetables, fish fillets, potatoes and candy.
 
Joel Wooten, GPA Board chairman, noted that the growing population in the region, combined with expansions in port and private infrastructure, are strengthening Savannah's position as a perishable supply chain gateway.
 
No more backlog at Georgia ports
 
Meanwhile, GPA reported that vessel service had returned to normal operations with no backlog.
 
Lynch also reported that four new ship-to-shore cranes are slated to arrive at the Port of Savannah on February 9. The cranes are large enough to handle vessels with a capacity of 20,000+ twenty-foot equivalent container units.
 
The cranes are destined for Container Berth 1 at Garden City Terminal, which is currently under renovation.
 
GPA said when berth improvements are complete in July, the Port of Savannah will be able to serve seven ships simultaneously.
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