Friday, April 1, 2016

Datamyne verifies West Coast port comeback





Datamyne, provider of web-based global market intelligence, finds that U.S. import volumes, measured in TEUs, have rebounded at West Coast ports so far this year. Imports through the port of Los Angeles increased 36 percent January through February of 2016 and 30 percent through the port
of Long Beach, compared with the same time period in 2015.

"West Coast ports have indeed made a comeback from the labor disputes and slowdowns that negatively impacted volumes in early 2015," said Datamyne CEO, Brendan McCahill. "Combined,
LA and Long Beach made up for 39 percent of all ocean imports to the United States in January and

February of this year, up 4 percent over the same two months last year."

The port of Oakland also had a notable 52 percent increase in import TEUs compared with January and February of 2015.

East and Gulf Coast ports did not see the same sweeping growth. Compared to January through February of last year, the port of New York/Newark increased in import volume by 5 percent, Norfolk, VA was up 17 percent and Houston declined 4 percent. The port of Savannah, which looked to have prospered from the western slowdowns last year, has continued to grow by 9 percent so far this year.


More Techwire stories

MSC and INTTRA partner on container weighing

Crowley sets LNG engine in new container/RoRo ship (video)

Liverpool2 announces summer opening

UK firm Strainstall receives award for container weighing system