Wilmington on the move

Yesterday I talked about a story about Maersk continuing to move services away from Charleston and redistribute them elsewhere.  Today, I wanted to briefly touch on the Port of Wilmington.  As I mentioned yesterday, Maersk will be moving some of its services to the North Carolina port.  What is interesting is that Maersk is not the only shipper to see the value in this location.  Earlier in the week I mentioned that International Container Lines would be leaving the Port of Richmond.  And where are they going?  Yep, to the Port of Wilmington.

With the addition of both of these shipping lines to the Wilmington roster, the port is set to enjoy year over year growth of over 100%.  Savannah will no longer be the “fastest growing port on the East Coast”.  It is important to keep in mind the base that Wilmington is working from.  Over the past 12 months, the port has handled approximately 200,000 TEUs.  So, where Savannah would hardly notice a 100,000 TEU increase, it’s a major news story for Wilmington.  However, the small river port does have some very good things going for it.

First, it is located along the Cape Fear River basin with a 42ft channel.  Second, it is geographically very far east.  It’s not quite as far east as Hampton Roads or NY/NJ, but it is farther than Charleston, Savannah or the Florida ports.  For the US-Europe trade lanes, this can mean less steaming time and a cost savings.  However, the slow river journey can mitigate those gains (see below).  Third, the port offers convenient access to the State’s textile and apparel manufacturers.  Fourth, the port has a multi-year expansion plan in place and is executing it.  They also have new dock equipment that is in place and ready to be utilized.  Finally, and this is often overlooked, the port is open on weekends.  As part of the agreement with Maersk, the port agreed to maintain Saturday hours.  Ships are expensive assets and they need to keep moving.  They don’t have the luxury of taking the weekend off.  If you, as a port operator, can offer weekend service you are providing a very valuable commodity to shippers.

There are two downsides that I see to the Port of Wilmington.  The first is its connection with the hinterlands.  While it appears very well located on a map, with 70% of the US population within a one day drive, getting to major interstate arteries is a challenge.  Via I-40, it is just about 100 miles to I-95.  If you head due west on Hwy 76, it is 80 miles to I-95.  That will make it difficult for them to attract major distribution centers that help to bring more business.  The second downside that I see is its position as a river port.  It is a 26 mile steam from the ocean buoy to the terminal.  That is time that is spent at significantly less than full speed and under the control of a harbor/river pilot ($$).  As always, time is money and time spent poking up a river is time you could be spending being unloaded, steaming to the next port, etc.

Overall, this is great news for Wilmington.  In this economy, any win is a HUGE win.  It will be interesting to see if more shippers begin looking at the Port of Wilmington as a viable alternative.  I’ll have to keep an eye on them.

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Port of Richmond loses its main carrier

The Link: LINK

The Story: Belgium based International Container Lines (ICL) announced that it will stop using the Port of Richmond to load and unload Mid-Atlantic cargo.  Effective March 2009, the company will instead use the Port of Wilmington in North Carolina.  Unfortunately, ICL accounts for approximately 75% of the traffic at the Port of Richmond.  Obviously, this is a tremendous blow to what is an incredibly valuable asset to the Commonwealth of Virginia.  ICL believes the Wilmington location will be a better compliment to its Philadelphia operation and will allow them to compete against South Carolina ports.

The Port of Richmond is obviously disappointed in the announcement, but remains hopeful that it can bounce back.  The port has a number of benefits to offer potential clients including barge service to the Port of Virginia in Hampton Roads and immediate access to I-95, I-85 and I-64.  Finally, the port is hopeful that it may receive some of the stimulus funds to increase the channel depth in the James River to allow transit of bigger ships.  As the farthest inland port in the US, and with excellent transportation access, the Port of Richmond has alot to offer. Now it can add “excess capacity” to that list of advantages.

Economy dings a Port of Richmond customer

You win some, you lose some…

You know that you live in a global community when the Icelandic economic crisis (yes, they have their own issues) has an effect on Richmond Virginia.  Due to the deteriorating economic conditions in Iceland, the Eimskip shipping line will be cutting back their Richmond service from one ship every 2 weeks to one ship every 24 days.

Yes, it’s a “loss”.  However, the Port administrators remain confident that they are still in good shape and are actively discussing ways to backfill Eimskip.  Maybe more barge services could be the answer?

64 Express begins operation

It may not have been enough to notice today, but there were 28 fewer trucks on I-64 heading from the port to Richmond.  That’s because the “64 Express” barge service began operation today, bringing 28 containers to the Port of Richmond.  As the service gains in popularity, it has the potential to remove over 58,000 trucks from the roads each year.  In the process, it further validates Richmond as an inland port location for the Port of Virginia.