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29 Jun 2008
On a once-sleepy strip of Dames Point overlooking the St. Johns River in northeast Jacksonville, crews are busy with the biggest contract in Jacksonville Port Authority history — the construction of a terminal for Tokyo-based Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, which will provide the first direct container ship service between northeast Florida and Asia. On the land, the crews are laying rails 100 feet apart for hulking new cranes that can lift up to 50 tons of cargo at a time. In the water, dredges are scraping out a
turning basin to make room for larger ships that will eventually triple Jaxport’s container capacity.
Another new terminal, for Seoul-based Hanjin, is also in the planning
stages — along with a boatload of infrastructure projects. Those
include an intermodal facility where containers will be transferred
onto trains, and a deepening of Jaxport’s shipping channel to 45 feet —
by itself at least a $400-million prospect. “The opportunities are
lining up,” says Rick Ferrin, Jaxport’s executive director. “If we play
them right, we’ll be one of the top 10 container ports in the country.”
Ferrin’s words could have come from any port director in Florida. All
of the state’s major ports are scrambling to cash in on an expected
doubling of waterborne trade in and out of the state within the next 20
years. Many officials believe that they could have one of the top
container ports in the country, if they only had the facilities to
handle the growth — bigger cranes, longer berths, deeper channels.
The seed for the potential trade boom was planted in October 2006, when
the citizens of Panama voted in a national referendum to expand their
nation’s canal. A $5.25-billion upsizing will double the waterway’s
capacity in 2014 — exactly 100 years after the United States first
opened the water passage between North and South America and the
Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
The chief benefit of widening the canal involves so-called
“post-Panamax” ships, monster freighters that can each carry more than
5,000 mobile-home-sized containers. At present, those post-Panamax
ships can’t fit through the canal. A third set of locks will double the
canal’s capacity, allowing container ships up to three times as large
as those that can pass through today.
Currently, only about a third of the world’s container-ship capacity
consists of post-Panamax ships. By 2011, more than half of the world’s
fleet will be supersized, and just about all the jumbo vessels will be
able to pass through the expanded canal.
The increased shipping capacity will shake up trade patterns throughout
the Western Hemisphere, and particularly along the eastern U.S. coast.
The project “will have a greater impact on international trade than the
original canal had 100 years ago,” predicts Richard Wainio, Port of
Tampa director and CEO, who served as an executive with the Panama
Canal Authority for 23 years.
Other factors make the timing fortuitous for Florida. Today, most
containers bound for the eastern seaboard enter through western U.S.
ports and are loaded onto 18-wheelers or trains. But the west coast
ports are severely congested and lack capacity. Meanwhile, the southern
U.S. market is growing rapidly. Demographers predict Florida’s
population will surpass New York’s by 2020. Also by that time, Asian
cargo alone bound for eastern U.S. ports is expected to double. It’s
much cheaper to ship goods by water directly to Florida than to unload
them in Los Angeles and truck them cross-country. It results in less
pollution and far less wear and tear on highways, too.
Florida port officials say the chief obstacle to cashing in on the
post-Panamax boom is the fact that not a single Florida facility can
berth the big ships. And so, across the state, port directors and other
officials are lobbying hard to expand their facilities. In addition to
$10-million-plus mega-cranes like those going in at Jaxport, port
officials say they need wider spaces to allow the ships to turn around;
much larger berths; and, most important, deeper channels.
But not every port can get everything it wants. Money is the limiting
factor. Florida’s 14 ports compete against one another for a small,
stagnant state appropriation for seaports. They’re also competing for
the increasingly hard-to-tap federal pot of money that funds U.S. Water
Resources Development Act projects such as channel deepening. Last
November, Congress authorized a project to deepen the South Channel at
Port of Miami to 50 feet as part of the Water Resources Development
Act. Port of Miami’s director, Bill Johnson, is more than a little
confident he’s won the jackpot. But he could soon learn what
water-management district officials in his region have from Everglades
restoration: Just because Congress authorizes a project doesn’t mean it
will allocate money for it.
The sheer number of Florida’s ports puts the state at a disadvantage to
East Coast rivals, most of which have only one port in the entire
state. As Miami, Jaxport and other Florida ports compete for
channel-deepening funds, they are up against out-of-state ports that
often have one powerful port authority and the state’s entire
congressional delegation lobbying for just one project.
Environmental and other regulatory issues also come into play. The U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, which has begun a feasibility study on
Jaxport’s proposal for a deeper channel, has been working on a similar
study for Port Everglades for no less than 10 years. “It has been one
review after another review after another, and the consequence is that
we’re going to lose business to those ports that are ready, from Texas
to New Orleans to Savannah to Charleston,” says Port Everglades
Director Phillip C. Allen.
While they wait for the Corps, Broward County commissioners, who
operate Port Everglades, are moving forward with a $100-million plan to
expand berths and a turning area that will destroy nine acres of
mangroves. The acreage is part of a tract the county promised to
protect forever as part of a deal with the state to allow construction
of freight yards and docks in 1987. State environmental regulators have
asked why Florida needs Port Everglades and Port of Miami, given their
proximity, to both accommodate post-Panamax ships.
One answer is that “everybody wants it all,” says Wainio.
Realistically, he and others say, that’s not possible. It also may not
be necessary. Wainio says while investments in waterside
infrastructure, land, storage, equipment and security are important,
most of Florida’s ports will benefit from the coming container boom
without having to dredge to 45 or 50 feet or buy post-Panamax cranes.
As larger ships come into play, he says, existing, smaller vessels will
be redeployed, creating growth opportunities for ports that choose not
to dredge or can’t afford to.
John Rood, a Jacksonville real estate developer who served as U.S.
ambassador to the Bahamas and worked closely with Freeport Container
Port, says he thinks the global market — rather than port authority or
Army Corps officials — ultimately will decide how Florida’s ports
expand. Rood sees opportunities for public-private partnerships
(so-called P-3s) between ports and private companies to help ports
grow. He cites Freeport, a transshipment hub where large carriers divvy
cargo onto smaller ships bound for secondary ports. The operation is a
public-private partnership between the port authority and Hutchison
Port Holdings of Hong Kong, one of the world’s largest port operators.
“The government of Bahamas never would have had the investment power or
technical skill that Hutchison brought,” Rood says.
Some efforts at public-private collaboration are already under way at
Florida ports. Mitsui O.S.K. Lines is paying for $211 million of its
$230 million terminal at Jaxport, and Ferrin is pitching creative
financing for several other infrastructure projects.
The challenges don’t end at the docks, however. Crucial for Jaxport is
a $40-million intermodal container facility to handle the cargo that
Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Hanjin and other shippers will bring. At least 30%
of all cargo will need to come or go by rail, and Jacksonville’s
CSX-owned intermodal terminals are on the opposite side of the city
from the port.
Indeed, when it comes to the projected cargo increase, highway and rail
congestion and connection problems are an even bigger issue for Florida
than on-port infrastructure. “We’re only as strong as our weakest
link,” says Wainio, whether that be lack of rail in central Florida or
tractor-trailer congestion in downtown Miami. “You have to look at this
from a strategic and statewide perspective.”
Officials with the Florida Ports Council, who work to coordinate and
lobby on behalf of all 14 ports, agree on the need for more intermodal
capacity. “To think about global logistics is big-picture for Florida,
but this controls everything,” says Nancy J. Leikauf, the council’s
executive vice president. “From the cost of our lumber to the trucks on
our highways to the jobs — are port jobs going to be created here or in
Savannah? We need to look at the global picture and take these funds
that are so precious and expand capacity where it is most needed.”
Source: Florida Trend