Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?The Peruvians have had gold as their natural wealth; the Chileans, copper; and the Venezuelans and Mexicans, petroleum. In our case it has been our geographical position and the Panama Canal.

This article has been written by a well-known member of the Panama maritime community, Mr. Ruben Karamñites. He is General Manager of Crowley Liner Transport and a leading member of the Panama Chamber of Shipping.

From the year 2000, the Canal is being handled and administered by Panamanians, with responsibility and transparency, with very well calculated and studied risks, without economically committing the future of our generations, on the contrary, serving as the basis for our social and economic development.

Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?The Panama Canal has a tremendous commitment and a great social and  economic responsibility to the country as much as it has to continue being projected internationally to the vanguard of development in the maritime  world and must walk hand in hand with the demands of the sector.  For this reason, it has to keep investing in maintenance and making the necessary modernization changes to the Canal, that would allow it to provide a good service and timely get an economical benefit, in view of the imminent world cargo growth.

The growth of cargo worldwide, the globalization, the consolidation of capitals and the worldwide development of the maritime industry, will keep its dynamics of constant changes and Panama must be ready to offer modern services through the Canal, modern port and Free Zone installations, to satisfy the needs and demands of the users, and the growing demand of the Canal service, otherwise another will offer it.

Consequently, to comply with all this, what is demanded and required is a constant modernization of our maritime resources and the Panama Canal; otherwise another will take the lead.

The International Maritime Community, the international commercial trade and the world in general are watching us, they are waiting to see what  will be the position of the Panamanians and they recognize that the Canal  has importance in world development and the movement of cargo.

KEY ARGUMENTS THAT ARE CAUSING CRISIS AND SUPPORT THE URGENT NEED OF IMMEDIATE ENLARGEMENT OF THE CANAL.


•   The Canal structures are now more than 90 years old, and throughout  their history they have required large investments for their maintenance  and operation.Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?
•   The Panama Canal has maintained for years an average daily transit of 38  ships, and as a result of its structural limitations, it has not been able  to grow more.
•   The Panama Canal continues confronting a problem of service to ships  that have to expect an average of 10 days delay in order to transit the  Canal, especially during the period of locks maintenance. At some periods the Canal has had up to 119 ships waiting to  transit and for this year, the maximum has been 110 ships.
•   There are limitations and lack of expansion in certain critical areas  for transit that permit a safe flowed of adequate traffic.
•   There is a need to improve the lighting in certain areas that help in an  effective way to improve the visibility on the Canal route.
•   Tie-up stations are urgently needed.
•   The Panama Canal at present does not have a real answer in the face of  the growing demand of services to satisfy the new business opportunities  that present themselves, through the development of the Post-panamax  ships.
•    There are various countries of the region that are studying alternatives  to the Panama Canal and they are directing themselves to the International  Community, tending toward improving the offer of the Canal and they are  determined to participate in the movement of international cargo from the  Atlantic to Pacific and vice versa. Among those that can be mentioned are  the United States of America, Mexico and Canada, that are revising their  systems of land transport (highways and railroads).  It is worth adding  that Nicaragua has been promoting the Asian interests that they  explore/revise the idea of a canal through Nicaraguan territory, an idea  that was born during the colonial era and that has remained in the  Nicaraguan mind.  On the other hand, Guatemala plans to modernize its  system of land transportation (highways and railroad).  All these  initiatives and innovative projects compete directly with the Panama Canal. If we do not act swiftly and intelligently to protect our resource  and the Canal business by improving its service, modernizing it and its  installations and developing the project of enlargement of the Canal  and to capture the growth of cargo moved on pos-panamax vessels, to  offer a better service to its users, otherwise we will end up with the  ” star  product “  gradually becoming known as a  ” product in decline ” .

Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?Concerning the Plan of  Disclosure of the Panama Canal Enlargement Project, it is important to take  up the subject again in the country, to answer the  great number of doubts that exists on this project in many sectors of the  Panamanian population!!!. This requires immediate work by an able  official:

•   He must adjust the form of the speech to give the Panamanian an adequate and  simple explanation, by knowing and identifying the doubts in the different areas of  the project.
• Invest in a more massive publicity to give to give  more disclosure to the project.
• The project needs to be presented in all the forums and discussions to cover all  the objections, even if they are unfavorable to the project or if they seem insignificant, this must be a 24 hours job.  Here are some of the objections, which from my point of view, does not represent firm arguments and are easy to clarify and explain to the community, but they are points of view and opinions adversed to the project that have been spread out:

Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?A.  ” It is not the moment to carry out the Project of  Enlargement ” .
B.  ” One must wait (1) a year more ” .   more?
C.  ” One must wait 10 to 15 years or more ” , and that  ” we only  need to develop the projects of modification of the critical areas and to  give greater expansion to the waterway.
This is sufficient ” .
D. ” The environmental aspect ” .
E. ” The hydrographic basin will be affected, diminishing  the supply of water for the country ” .
F. ” How it is established that the project of enlargement  will generate 40,000 jobs? “  and  ” How can they assure that it will give  jobs to so many Panamanians? ” ” How many reigners will be employed for  the work? “
G. ” We believe that the project will cost much more than the amount presented by the Canal; the financing of the project will cause debt problems to the country for the oans that will be requested to the banks; these economic resources from the Canal that will be used to develop the project could better be used to make more roads, homes, and schools for the Panamanians ” .

Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?This Enlargement Project can not wait, it includes the third set of locks, the modification of the critical areas and the Canal widening.  This is the time to do it, becase it is foreseen that for 2014, present Canal will be reaching its maximum capacity and according to the projections of the studies, we are now just in time to begin the enlargement project. We urgently need to increase our offer capacity to capture the growth of the worldwide cargo and to provide a better service to the Canal users.   The more the project is delayed, the more expensive it will be, the competitive threads increases and the business opportunities are reduced.

The existence of over 23 environmental and archaeological researches; the derogation of Law No. 44, in which finally the creation of damming to increase the volume of water in the Canal; the projects of water administration; the deepen of the route through dredging, to guarantee the way of the vessels of greater draft, were discarded.  The evaluation of this environmental theme is link to the cost benefit of the project for the Panamanian State.

The doubt that exists in the labor area related to the quantity of jobs for Panamanians, is directly related to the satisfaction of their needs and the domino effect that the project will have in the national economy.  The expectations could be exceeded, if we do not trained the Panamanian labor force to the future, when the development projects in the construction (hotels, casinos, roads, condominiums, office buildings, etc.) juxtapose with the project of the Canal Enlargement and beware that we are going to end bringing manual or skilled labor to face the job demand (same as it happened during the construction of the Panama Canal in 1904).  We all have to be ready for the great quantity of jobs that will arise in all labor areas, both vocational and professional. The Panama Canal Enlargment Project will resolve the home economical needs of all Panamanians, who will have a job.  Panamanians only want to see that they will really have a job and will directly receive the economic benefit of their effort.  Any other argument exceeds their humble interest.

Why ” Yes ” to the Panama Canal enlargement project?The project financing, as well as its real impact in the national economy, must be fully clarified and discussed.  It is true that the themes have been explained and that we can be sure that the project is self financeable/sustainable, with a projection of conviction to the Panamanians, directed to the human development and to improve the Panamanians quality of life.

If you do not understand the range of the role the Panama Canal must play in the 21 Century for a globalized world, then it is time to know it. The changes that Panama will face after the Referendum of October 22, 2006, are deep and will be at other level, directed to the complete development.  This is the most relevant project developed in the Republic of Panama and in all the region, after the construction of the Panama Canal (1904/1914), which will change our future for the benefit of all Panamanians and the International Trade.

” Panama it is your Canal, modernize it ” ” The Enlargement of the Canal  will be for your future development ” ” Be prepared for this development “

http://www.bulletinpa.com/index.php?id=713

Chamber of Shipping of Panama in favor of the proposal to enlarge the Panama Canal

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

Chamber of Shipping of Panama in favor of the proposal to enlarge the Panama Canal

The ports of the Republic of Panama, the merchant marine, the agencies and shipping lines, the Colon Free Zone, the railroad and many other service suppliers connected with the economic activities of the Panama Canal, are complemented mutually and form the Conglomerate of the Canal.

This Conglomerate and the Economic System by-product of the operations of the interoceanic waterway contribute more than 20% of the Gross Domestic Product of the country and generate approximately 293,000 direct and indirect jobs.

Chamber of Shipping of Panama in favor of the proposal to enlarge the Panama Canal

The Chamber of Shipping of Panama, as an organization that groups together the great majority of the members of the Maritime Sector, sector, which shows the highest indexes of growth in the domestic economy over the past five-year period, after having studied the proposal of enlargement of the Panama Canal and consulting with all its members and national and international clients, considers that the enlargement of the Canal is necessary for the following reasons:Chamber of Shipping of Panama in favor of the proposal to enlarge the Panama Canal

1. The Panama Canal is operating to almost 85% of its maximum capacity, which signifies that in a relatively short time, it will not be able to continue attending efficiently to the growing demand of traffic, a product of the tendencies of growth of international markets,

2. The Panama Canal requires increasingly more frequent cycles of maintenance due to its 96 years of uninterrupted use in the service of world commerce, which at the same time delays in great measure the traffic of ships that use the waterway,Chamber of Shipping of Panama in favor of the proposal to enlarge the Panama Canal

3. The shipping companies, clients of the Panama Canal, are tending to build larger ships (Post-Panamax) for the scale of economic benefits that the same represent, and which currently cannot use the canal,

4. The shipping companies consider that the Panama Canal represents the most dependable and viable route to operate their ships on the Pacific and Atlantic oceans and they understand and accept that the enlargement will involve gradual increases in the anticipated traffic and that the principles of productivity, efficiency, security and cost-benefits that currently exist, will be maintained,

5. We Panamanians have shown great talent and professionalism in administering the canal efficiently since it was transferred back to Panamanian hands. As previously stated, we are convinced that this project, properly executed, will benefit Panama and all Panamanians equally, and we support firmly the proposal of enlargement of the Panama Canal.

Julio De La Lastra, President, Panama Chamber of Shipping, signed in Panama on the 20th of August 2006

Panama Canal Ties Traffic Record

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

PANAMA CITY, Panama, August 15, 2007 – For the third time in the last 14 months, the Panama Canal tied its record for the total number of daily transits that have an overall length greater than 900 feet. Demonstrating its capability to manage the growing demand for its waterway, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) announced today that nine vessels with an overall length greater than 900 feet transited the Canal on Tuesday, August 7 – tying the record achieved in May 2006 and matched in April 2007. On average, 39 vessels transit the waterway each day and, of those, usually five vessels are greater than 900 feet. “Setting this record for the third time is evidence of the ACP’s hard work and dedication. Everyday, as demand continues to grow, we are increasing the efficiency and reliability of the waterway,” said ACP Vice President of Operations Manuel Benitez. “We are proud of this accomplishment and will continue to build upon our successes to provide the best service to our customers – which is our top priority.” (more)

All of the record-tying vessels were container vessels and, due to the size of the vessel (greater than 900 feet), require more time and resources to transit the waterway. Of the nine, Maersk and Evergreen own two vessels each and the remaining belonged to MSC, ZIM, CMA-CGM, HAPAG-LLOYD and COSCO.

About the Panama Canal Authority

The Panama Canal Authority (ACP) is the autonomous agency of the Government of Panama in charge of managing, operating and maintaining the Panama Canal. The ACP is governed by its organic law and the regulations approved by its Board of Directors. For more information, please refer to the Panama Canal Authority’s Web site: www.pancanal.com. For Panama Canal video, please visit www.thenewsmarket.com/panamacanal.

Navigating the Northwest Passage

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

DAVID LJUNGGREN - Reuters - OTTAWA — While there has been much talk that Arctic trade routes will open up as northern ice melts, shipping companies and experts say using the fabled Northwest Passage through Canada’s Arctic archipelago would be too difficult, too dangerous and totally impractical. In theory, the idea is tempting – the passage cuts the distance between Europe and the Far East to just 7,900 nautical miles (14,630 kilometres), from 12,600 nautical miles (23,335 km) through the Panama Canal. Global warming means the summer ice cover in the Arctic is shrinking at such a rapid rate that experts predict the waters could be clear for at least part of the year within a few decades. Yet few predict vessels will steam through the passage in any great numbers. The highly unpredictable nature of Arctic ice, a total lack of infrastructure, narrow channels, relatively shallow waters, increased insurance costs and the unwillingness of firms to take risks are all deterrents. (more)

“No one in the industry is really talking about the Northwest Passage being a serious alternative to the Panama Canal, even if it does open up at all,” said Simon Bennett, secretary of the International Chamber of Shipping in London.

“There are navigational challenges, so many ‘ifs’ and ‘buts’ and the idea that you are going to take merchant ships with deep draughts through icy waters that are uncharted, really means that currently it is no match for the canal.”

Even if the ice does melt in summer, the season would be very brief, perhaps from late June to late September. Then the long dark winter starts drawing in and ice forms again.

And just because there is no ice in the passage one summer is no guarantee it will not return the next – a factor that does little to assuage vessels seeking reliable routes.

Canarctic Shipping, by far the biggest operator in the Canadian Arctic, says the extremely high demand for cargo ships means owners do not need to look for shortcuts.

“Ships are not like buses. They don’t run on a schedule at 3:20 in the afternoon. They have to be positioned,” said Tom Paterson, Canarctic’s vice-president of ship management.

“The big fear is that you get up there and you can’t get through because you’ve got a block point … and then you’ve risked the customer’s cargo and have to reroute him back through Panama and he’s not going to take that risk.”

The passage is in fact five different routes through dozens of rocky islands and narrow waterways. The southern route, the one least likely to be affected by ice, is also one of the most challenging and not best suited to enormous ships that need plenty of water to manoeuvre.

Michael Gardiner, assistant commissioner of the Canadian Coast Guard for the Arctic, said there had only been 150 transits in the past 100 years, most by Coast Guard vessels.

“The Northwest Passage in its entirety has often been described at shipping conferences … as a rock pile. It’s very tricky navigation through most of it,” he said. And if a ship got into trouble, the rescue effort would be massively complex and costly, said Bob Gorman of Enfotec, which provides ice navigation services in the Arctic.

“It’s just not a route well travelled … there are no tugboats nearby, there are no shipyards nearby, there are no repair facilities, there is no port of safe refuge. You are really out in the wilderness,” he said.

Another challenge is the slowly rotating permanent ice cap at the top of the world, which is made up of diamond-hard multiyear ice that can easily tear holes in ships. Chunks of this ice, which are hard to spot, occasionally make it into the passage and are expected to be more frequent as the Arctic warms and the giant cap slowly comes apart.

“We believe that the last ice in the Arctic to melt, whenever it is … is likely going to be this ice,” said John Falkingham of the Canadian Ice Service.

This puts the focus on other routes that might become ice-free in summer, such as those over the North Pole and along the top of Russia.

Using the Northwest Passage is also hampered by bureaucracy. Canada claims control of the waters in the passage – something the United States disputes – and allows ships to sail through only if they are specially strengthened and follow a series of strict rules.

Most analysts do expect increased shipping going into and out of the Arctic to meet growing demand for the remote region’s rich store of minerals. But experts say that does not mean cargo vessels will be crowding through the passage as they seek a shortcut.

“There’s going to be a lot more people and lot more ships there, but it’s not going to be the Panama of the North,” Mr. Falkingham said.

With a report from Stefano Ambrogi in London

SOURCE: Don Winner @ Panama-guide.com

ACP Announces 2007 Metrics - Total Transits Up

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

PANAMA CITY, Panama, October 29, 2007 – The Panama Canal Authority (ACP) announced its operational metrics for the 2007 fiscal year (FY 07) today. Year-end (October – September) statistics reveal a drop in Canal Waters Time (CWT), the average time it takes a vessel to navigate the Canal including waiting time. The numbers show a rise in total annual tonnage, evidenced by the Canal’s record-breaking achievement surpassing the 300 million ton mark. The Panama Canal set another transit record last September by ushering through 25 Panamax ships (the largest vessels able to transit the Canal) in one day. (more)

Fiscal year 2007 CWT dropped 7.4 percent, compared with FY 06 – to 27.84 hours from 30.05 hours. CWT for booked vessels (those ships holding reservations) decreased 4.3 percent to 16.96 hours from 17.72 in FY 06. Booked vessels account for more than 50 percent of oceangoing transits. Utilization of the booking system in 2007 increased to 95.2 percent from 93.5 percent in FY 06.

In fiscal year 2007, the ACP set a Canal record by transiting 313 million Panama Canal/Universal Measurement System (PC/UMS) tons (from 298 million PC/UMS tons in FY 06). This five percent increase represents a difference of 15 million more PC/UMS tons over last year. “These metrics provide us with the means to consistently measure and analyze our performance and our business. They point to areas where we are succeeding and where we need improvement. This record-breaking year is a testament to our world-class workforce, top-notch service and industry-leading technology. Our employees are constantly pushing the envelope, trying to be innovative, striving to improve,” said ACP Administrator/CEO Alberto Alemán Zubieta. Total transits increased 3.7 percent to 14,721 in FY 07 from 14,194 in FY 06. Additionally, the Canal saw a rise in transits of vessels 900 feet or more in length. Transits by these vessels increased 11.4 percent – to 1,794 transits from 1,610 in FY 06. These numbers are largely attributed to the increased use of container vessels by shippers to transport goods to market. The official accident rate dropped to 0.68 accidents per 1,000 transits from 0.70 accidents per 1,000 transits in FY 06. An official accident is one in which a formal investigation is requested and conducted.

About the Panama Canal Authority (ACP): The ACP is the autonomous agency of the Government of Panama in charge of managing, operating and maintaining the Panama Canal. The operation of the ACP is based on its organic law and the regulations approved by its Board of Directors. For more information, please refer to the ACP’s Web site: www.pancanal.com. For Panama Canal video, please visit www.thenewsmarket.com/panamacanal.

SOURCE: Don Winner @ Panama-guide.com

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Source: VIP Panama

Barro Colorado Island - Aerial View

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

By DON WINNER for Panama-Guide.com - This aerial view of the world famous Barro Colorado Island. From the web site of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute - “Barro Colorado Island (BCI), a 1,500-hectare island, is STRI’s primary site for the study of lowland moist tropical forests. Together with five adjacent peninsulas, BCI forms the 5,400-hectare Barro Colorado Nature Monument (BCNM), which is located in the middle of the Panama Canal . Established in April 17, 1923 , BCNM and has been administered by the Smithsonian since 1946. We welcome around 200 scientists from around the world every year. Modern, air-conditioned laboratory space, a cafeteria, and accommodations are available for resident researchers, and the Field Research Station features all the necessary infrastructure: offices, labs, growing houses, an insectary, dark room, computer room, dining hall, conference room, visitor’s center, as well as Internet access, telephones, and boat rental services.” This aerial view helps to get a grasp of the size of this huge island.

Copyright 2007 by Don Winner for Panama-Guide.com. Go ahead and use whatever you like as long as you credit the source. Salud.


Navigating the Northwest Passage

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

DAVID LJUNGGREN - Reuters - OTTAWA — While there has been much talk that Arctic trade routes will open up as northern ice melts, shipping companies and experts say using the fabled Northwest Passage through Canada’s Arctic archipelago would be too difficult, too dangerous and totally impractical. In theory, the idea is tempting – the passage cuts the distance between Europe and the Far East to just 7,900 nautical miles (14,630 kilometres), from 12,600 nautical miles (23,335 km) through the Panama Canal. Global warming means the summer ice cover in the Arctic is shrinking at such a rapid rate that experts predict the waters could be clear for at least part of the year within a few decades. Yet few predict vessels will steam through the passage in any great numbers. The highly unpredictable nature of Arctic ice, a total lack of infrastructure, narrow channels, relatively shallow waters, increased insurance costs and the unwillingness of firms to take risks are all deterrents. (more)

“No one in the industry is really talking about the Northwest Passage being a serious alternative to the Panama Canal, even if it does open up at all,” said Simon Bennett, secretary of the International Chamber of Shipping in London.

“There are navigational challenges, so many ‘ifs’ and ‘buts’ and the idea that you are going to take merchant ships with deep draughts through icy waters that are uncharted, really means that currently it is no match for the canal.”

Even if the ice does melt in summer, the season would be very brief, perhaps from late June to late September. Then the long dark winter starts drawing in and ice forms again.

And just because there is no ice in the passage one summer is no guarantee it will not return the next – a factor that does little to assuage vessels seeking reliable routes.

Canarctic Shipping, by far the biggest operator in the Canadian Arctic, says the extremely high demand for cargo ships means owners do not need to look for shortcuts.

“Ships are not like buses. They don’t run on a schedule at 3:20 in the afternoon. They have to be positioned,” said Tom Paterson, Canarctic’s vice-president of ship management.

“The big fear is that you get up there and you can’t get through because you’ve got a block point … and then you’ve risked the customer’s cargo and have to reroute him back through Panama and he’s not going to take that risk.”

The passage is in fact five different routes through dozens of rocky islands and narrow waterways. The southern route, the one least likely to be affected by ice, is also one of the most challenging and not best suited to enormous ships that need plenty of water to manoeuvre.

Michael Gardiner, assistant commissioner of the Canadian Coast Guard for the Arctic, said there had only been 150 transits in the past 100 years, most by Coast Guard vessels.

“The Northwest Passage in its entirety has often been described at shipping conferences … as a rock pile. It’s very tricky navigation through most of it,” he said. And if a ship got into trouble, the rescue effort would be massively complex and costly, said Bob Gorman of Enfotec, which provides ice navigation services in the Arctic.

“It’s just not a route well travelled … there are no tugboats nearby, there are no shipyards nearby, there are no repair facilities, there is no port of safe refuge. You are really out in the wilderness,” he said.

Another challenge is the slowly rotating permanent ice cap at the top of the world, which is made up of diamond-hard multiyear ice that can easily tear holes in ships. Chunks of this ice, which are hard to spot, occasionally make it into the passage and are expected to be more frequent as the Arctic warms and the giant cap slowly comes apart.

“We believe that the last ice in the Arctic to melt, whenever it is … is likely going to be this ice,” said John Falkingham of the Canadian Ice Service.

This puts the focus on other routes that might become ice-free in summer, such as those over the North Pole and along the top of Russia.

Using the Northwest Passage is also hampered by bureaucracy. Canada claims control of the waters in the passage – something the United States disputes – and allows ships to sail through only if they are specially strengthened and follow a series of strict rules.

Most analysts do expect increased shipping going into and out of the Arctic to meet growing demand for the remote region’s rich store of minerals. But experts say that does not mean cargo vessels will be crowding through the passage as they seek a shortcut.

“There’s going to be a lot more people and lot more ships there, but it’s not going to be the Panama of the North,” Mr. Falkingham said.

With a report from Stefano Ambrogi in London

SOURCE: Don Winner @ Panama-guide.com

Panama Canal Completes Infrastructure Enhancement

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

PANAMA CITY, Panama, September 24, 2007 – Locomotives play a pivotal role in the operation of the Panama Canal locks. Last week, at a ceremony at Gatun Locks, the Canal marked the completion of its project to replace all of the towing tracks on which the locomotives travel. The Panama Canal’s locomotive tow tracks run parallel to each side of the Canal’s lock chambers. The tow tracks enable locomotive units or “mules” as they are called, to move alongside transiting vessels, affixed by wire cables, to maintain a ship’s position during passage through Canal locks. Replacing the tracks, therefore, will increase the efficiency of transits at the Canal. (more)

“Well-run locks are critical to providing our customers with safe, reliable and efficient service. Ultimately, our goal in rehabilitating these tracks is to decrease the time a vessel spends in each lockage, increase efficiency and augment capacity,” ACP Vice President of Operations Manuel Benitez said. In total, the ACP has replaced 50,000 feet of tow track.

The new track, laid at the Canal’s Miraflores, Pedro Miguel and Gatun Locks, will enhance service, in part because the old tracks needed continual maintenance. “This is the first time we have overhauled the entire rail system. This upgrade – carried out without any significant service interruptions – helps us continue to offer safe, reliable and efficient service upon which our customers rely,” said Mr. Benitez. “In addition, this new track will increase efficiency because our new locomotives are built and designed to travel on it.”

About the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) The ACP is the autonomous agency of the Government of Panama in charge of managing, operating and maintaining the Panama Canal. The operation of the ACP is based on its organic law and the regulations approved by its Board of Directors. For more information, please refer to the ACP’s Web site: www.pancanal.com. For Panama Canal video, please visit www.thenewsmarket.com/panamacanal.

SOURCE: Don Winner @ Panama-guide.com

Trade in the Americas: Expanding the Panama Canal for the 21st Century

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

By Gail Dutton for World Trade Magazine - The Panama Canal Authority is experiencing every company’s dream—a steady influx of business with more than it can handle in the wings. Fueled by the rapid growth of Asian exports, the canal has to expand to remain viable. And when it does, it will ensure that the fleet of post-Panamax (PPX) ships, which grew 143 percent since 2002, can finally transit the canal—raising the threshold of trans-Pacific trade up a magnitude. Today, ships carrying more than 4,000 TEUs generally are too big for the Canal’s existing locks. In planning a new lane, with longer and wider locks and deeper channels, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) expects to double cargo transiting capacity. With that capacity, say industry observers, should come reduced overall shipping costs and expanded shipping options after the new lane opens in 2014, in time for the canal’s centennial. (more)

Rodolfo Sabonge, vice president of research and market analysis for the Panama Canal Authority, suggests this all-water route may also reduce pollution, help distributors to locate distribution centers closer to the population, and boost the economies in states where those new facilities may be located.

U.S. carriers and businesses, while less ebullient, are optimistic.

A spokesman for Procter & Gamble Coffees, notes that although “most of our coffees don’t come through the canal, it could help with our Asian imports,” namely coffee beans from Vietnam or Indonesia. As an alternative to landing at West Coast ports and being hauled to processing plants in New Orleans, Kansas City and Sherman, Texas, shipments could come into New Orleans directly. “It’s too far out,” cautions Lars Atorf, to figure a cost/benefit analysis.

For Tokyo-based container ship operator Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd. (K Line), seven years isn’t too far ahead to start planning. Last June, it launched a weekly container service linking Asia with the East Coast of South America, “to meet fast-growing market demand,” and as a prelude, say observers, to pushing northward up the Atlantic.

Another very large Asian shipping line, which asked to be unnamed, sees other benefits, too. “It will let us get rid of uneconomical vessels,” an executive notes. The company expects to take delivery on 5 PPX ships by about 2010. But, he adds, terminals, cranes, capacity and infrastructure all need improvement. “Some ports will have to grow.”

Port improvement is, in fact, a recurring theme when discussing the Panama Canal expansion. APL’s Bob Sappio, senior Vice President, Transpacific Trade, says the new lane will allow economies of scale possible with PPX ships of 8,000 to 10,000 TEUs to be passed on only “if the terminal infrastructure in the U.S. is capable of handing them.” APL is hammering that message home at every opportunity. “If the terminals are incapable of handling the volume, the benefits of the expanded canal will be less.”

Port expansion

Today, only four U.S. ports can handle PPX ships—Seattle, Tacoma, Los Angeles-Long Beach, and Norfolk. East Coast and Gulf ports are preparing to change that.

“Once we heard about the canal expansion, the Army Corps of Engineers began to study its likely impact on Port Everglades,” notes Allan Sosnow, Port Everglades’ environmental project manager. It’s dredging channels now; in the future there are plans to increase capacity and intermodal operations, add new berths and enhance operational efficiency.

The expanding canal is only partially responsible for the burst of activity, though. U.S. ports need extra capacity regardless of what’s happening in Panama. “We all hope to move forward, and we all need to deepen channels and construct facilities,” to handle increased cargo, notes Richard Wainio, port director and CEO, Tampa Port Authority.

At the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey, expansion is underway. Half of its cargo, by value, comes from Asia already. To accommodate PPX ships, dredging is underway to deepen the harbor to 50 feet by 2014, according to spokesman Steve Coleman. (That project is designated a national priority by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, with a fiscal 2008 budget of $91 million.)

“We expect cargo levels to increase about 7 percent per year, and to double in 10 years from 5 million TEUs per year today,” Coleman says. The port authority is also in the midst of a $600 million project to add intermodal rail access to all terminals. In 2006, it added the capacity for 350 additional lifts and expects to handle 1.3 million by 2011,

Being able to accept PPX ships is only part of the issue for the ports. Even without the canal’s expanded capacity, “Significant delays are likely in the next few years,” notes Tampa’s Wainio. “The only part of the business expected to grow is the container business. So, to be a major player, you have to expand.”

For manufacturers or importers, though, there are some tradeoffs. “You should get lower unit costs,” Wainio says, by sailing 8,000 to 12,000 TEU vessels, but moving from Los Angeles-Long Beach by rail is faster than sailing through Panama and up the East Coast. But, rail doesn’t carry as much as ships.” In fact, one 4,000 TEU ship carries the equivalent load of 16 trains. In the tradeoff between cost and time, Wainio speculates that high value time-sensitive goods will still use West Coast ports and that commodities will save money and choose the canal route.

Today’s challenge for the Port of Long Beach is overcoming an environmental bottleneck that is delaying infrastructure and terminal expansion. As spokesman Art Wong elaborates, “The EIR (environmental review) has to be approved before we can even vote on going forward,” with terminal and intermodal expansions.

West Coast ports, he points out, have some significant advantages over their East Coast counterparts, including proximity to the West Coast population centers, and reliable rail connections. Most notable, however, is the fact that three of the four U.S. ports deep enough to handle PPX ships are here. So, “If the East Coast can’t handle PPX, they’ll come here,” Wong says, noting that the Port of Long Beach can handle PPX ships up to 8,000 TEUs.

Intermodal

There may be a catch, though. “The increase in Asian imports—primarily from China—is forecast to exceed the capacity of the ports to handle it,” based on existing rail and road infrastructure, according to Rodolfo Sabonge, vice president of research and market analysis for the Panama Canal Authority.

Admittedly, the Panama Canal expansion “could shake up U.S. logistics, but that’s not a given,” Wainio says. Many factors are in play, including how the widening is handled, how tolls are adjusted, West Coast port growth, intermodal rail expansion and plans for ports and intermodal links from Mexico. The right choices, expanding the elements of the infrastructure, will enable U.S. channels to prevail. To fail, however, will cause severe dislocation.

The largest intermodal line in North America, BNSF, is expanding its major intermodal hubs in Dallas, Chicago, Kansas City and Memphis and is developing logistics parks—industrial parks built around intermodal hubs, “with a lot of land around them for further development,” Steve Branscum, BNSF vice president of consumer products, notes.

Union Pacific doesn’t expect any major repercussions from the expanded Panama Canal, according to Brian McDonald, Vice President, Intermodal Marketing and Sales. It’s expanding its facilities and tracks, with emphasis on double-tracking the Los Angeles to El Paso run and expanding intermodal hubs in San Antonio, Dallas, and Salt Lake.

BNSF’s Branscum predicts that no more than 35 percent of the freight coming from Asia to the U.S. will go through the Panama Canal. Right now, he explains, about 75 percent of the Asian imports come through the West Coast and are distributed throughout the West and Midwest. “It’s quicker to ship from the West Coast than to send goods through the Panama Canal to the East Coast and then ship backwards to interior markets,” he says.

A widened Panama Canal is just one of the shipping options, though. From Vietnam and points south and east, the Suez Canal route is shorter. Therefore, Robert West, managing director of global trade and transportation at Global Insights in Lexington, Massachusetts, suggests that value-added goods from India may choose that route to the U.S. East Coast, while goods from China may choose West Coast ports and intermodal shipping or choose the Panama Canal.

Another option being explored by some of the Chinese shipping lines and U.S intermodal operators, focuses on expanding Mexican ports and then developing rail lines north. This offers an alternative to southern Californian ports to relieve any bottlenecks. “If we can’t improve the throughput or productivity on the West Coast, there’s a real crunch coming,” one shipping executive said.

The port most often mentioned as a major entry point, Lazaro Cardenas, is a deep-water port about 1,000 miles from the U.S. border. Branscum discounts it as a serious option, though. “A port city, to be part of a core intermodal network, needs to be near a big market,” Branscum says, and the Mexican markets haven’t developed to that point. Right now, it handles less than 100,000 containers and is expanding to handle nearly 200,000 containers by 2017. In contrast, the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach handled 15 million containers in 2006.

Transshipping

Although Post-Panamax ships certainly will use the expanded Panama Canal, there are some powerful economic reasons not to. Global Insight’s West points out that it’s not cost effective for PPX ships to make multiple ports of call. The result, he says, may be increased transshipping in the Caribbean, with a PPX ship traversing the canal for a major hub port and reloading there for the trip back through the canal. The potential transshipping benefit is increased backhaul and more efficient distribution.

Another possibility, raised by Panama, is the creation of a megaport at the western entrance of the canal. In the past decade, Sabonge says transshipped cargo has grown from about 250,000 TEUs to 3 million TEUs. The proposed megaport would increase that number by allowing PPX ships to off-load there. Construction costs are estimated at $600 million.

The great unknowns

The effects of the new lane of the Panama Canal on U.S. businesses depend on a lot of outside factors. The first two are that Asia will continue to be the source of most of America’s imports, and that the Panama Canal will be the most desirable route to the East Coast.

The third unknown is what the government of Panama will do to the toll structure, although Francisco Miguez, manager, contracts and administration division, ACP, points out that toll increases are set in consultation with the canal’s customers and that no increase is planned in the foreseeable future. “Long term, we’ll consider market conditions in the toll structure. The idea is to capture for the canal the value we provide and encourage commerce and vessel traffic to continue to increase,” Miguez says. Right now, the canal is debt-free, with $1.7 billion in revenues.

The timing, also, “is ambitious,” notes APL’s Sappio. “It’s an extremely large project for a small country like Panama. With projected costs running $5.25 billion “they have to get it done, on time, with minimal cost overruns and in a way that sends a message to the world that’s it’s been done properly.”

Sidebar: Progress Update

In the year since Panama’s national referendum approved the expansion, financial and legal experts have been hired and requests for proposals have been issued in numerous areas. The first construction contract was this past July.

Expanding the Panama Canal is a huge project, “but it’s do-able,” notes Robert McMillan, chairman of the Panama Canal Commission until the 1999 handover. “I honestly believe Panama is trying to be above-board and transparent in what they’re doing,” he says.

Panama consistently has said the canal would be self-financing, but that really means the people of Panama won’t be stuck with the bill, Miguez explains.

“Funding hasn’t yet been arranged,” Miguez says, noting that the need for financing will come during the heavy construction phase scheduled for between 2010 and 2013 (financing is being coordinated by Japan’s Mizuho Corporate Bank, Ltd). Right now, Panama is evaluating options, including obtaining a credit rating for the ACP for the possibility of issuing bonds, he continues.

Gail Dutton

Gail Dutton is a veteran journalist, covering national and international business and technology issues from her office in Montesano, Washington.

SOURCE: Don Winner @ Panama-guide.com

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Source: VIP Panama

The Shipping, Ports and Terminals Event for the Americas

November 14, 2007 By: admin Category: Panama Canal

The Shipping, Ports and Terminals Event for the Americas 6-8 November 2007, El Panama Hotel, Panama City, Panama. TOC Americas, the Terminal Operations Conference and Exhibition for the Americas, is the definitive meeting place for the world’s shipping, port and terminals industries. Following a successful 2006 event in Mexico, TOC returns to Panama for 2007. Exhibitors at TOC Americas 2007 are pulling out all the stops in their bid to attract visitors and delegates to their stands. The event, to be held at the El Panama Hotel, Panama City, from 6-8 November, will feature a whole range of new products and services, as well as a number of first-time exhibitors, making it a must-attend event for all those involved in the container shipping, ports and terminals industries. Advent Inc (stand A22) will be displaying a suite of products to suit terminals of all shapes and sizes, including the The Advent Terminal Operating System (TOS) for large terminals, the web-based Terminal Management System TOS for small to medium-sized and multi-cargo terminals, and the Advent Equipment Maintenance and Repair system. Company representatives will also be keen to talk to visitors about Advent’s enterprise source code licensing arrangement – the unique way in which it licenses products to customers. (more)

SOURCE: Don Winner @ Panama-guide.com

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Source: VIP Panama

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