Commentary: Expansion Of The Panama Canal Benefits Global Trade

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As a FreightWaves reader you know that FreightWaves is constantly pursuing coverage of the most important transportation issues in the world. To that end, its reporters frequently travel to strategic logistics sites to ensure a live-action view of what is going on. Recently I visited the Panama Canal and I am happy to report that things are running smoothly with some newly completed developments and some interesting projects on the horizon.

Currently around 12,000 ships pass through the Panama Canal annually, or about 32 per day. The expansion cost around $5.25 billion and allows the larger Neo-Panamax ships to move through the canal. The expansion occurred just in time to coincide with an unprecedented increase in international trade, especially in trans-Pacific shipping.

Photo credit: Shutterstock

Photo courtesy of the Panama Canal Authority.

Costs have become the canal's stumbling block, with an average passage priced at around $450,000. Ships pay about $99 per full container, $59 for empties and thousands of dollars more for tugboats, groundwires and ground assistants. Before the canal was expanded, the record paid for a single passage was $461,000. With the Neo-Panamax ships in play, the average jumped and so did the record, to over $1.1 million.

Since the United States relinquished its claim to the Panama Canal Zone, China has steadily crept into the void left behind. In Part 2 of this article, I will write about China's relationship with Panama and the Panama Canal and what that means for the United States, the Western economies and global trade in general.

Image sourced from Pixabay

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