Just a reminder Sal, the Edmund Fitzgerald put to sea for the last time today 48 years ago...Ya got anything for her in tribute? Perhaps something about the changes to maritime law and how the changes after the loss of the good ship and crew well seasoned might have saved some of them? You know, the things sailors today take for granted aboard ship.
My family had a personal connection with the Fitzgerald's, as a little kid talking to Mrs. Fitz I learned of the impact to her husband who was not in the greatest of health at the time of the loss of ore carrier. I still like to listen to Gordon Lightfoot - "Wreck Of The Edmu nd Fitzgerald" Thanks @macnachten8822 for the reminder
It doesn't seem like that long ago. Time seems to pass more quickly as I age. Technically, the Edmund Fitzgerald never put to sea. It lived it's life on the Great Lakes and never touched salt water. Probably the only change since the sinking has been some improvement in weather forecasting, reporting, communications and GPS. There was another even larger and far more deadly storm that hit the Great Lakes hardest on November 9th 1913. 19 ships were lost and over 250 people died.
One of your best ever!!! So comprehensive and well thought out! When I was in SriLanka (Colombo) I saw the immense new harbor and port that the Chinese had built and financed. It left Sri Lanka with a huge debt (which the Chinese are renegotiating terms of payment on as Colombo threatened default), so it doesnt surprise me that we are trying to thwart the Chinese influence by offering dollars to enhance their port/storage facilities and thus disrupt the Chinese Belt and Road. I totally agree that its shameful that the US hasnt modernized and automated our ports and in general improved our own infrastructure. Near shoring will not dramatically change the need for better and more modern ports...this is something that should have happened when we first opened the doors to imports from the Far East. Thanks again for your work on this great presentation!
FINALLY!!! Mystery solved. I never was able to understand the toilet paper thing. I worked from home before, during, and after CV - so my TP consumption was fairly stable. Thank you, Sal!
I heard another version that the business oriented toilet came in a different size than the ones intended for home use, and weren't compatible, so while toilet paper existed and might have been in the right area, it wasn't the right kind.
@@subduedreader5627 Yep, larger rolls, but like he said, you can read a newspaper through single ply. Even so, I read all kinds of people claiming the US didn't make tp, that we imported it all, which was nonsense. It did, however, show us once again, how fragile our supply chain had become. And we couldn't wait to go right back to the same broken system as soon as we could.
To be fair, the supply chain issues are real. But in my neck of the woods, hoarding caused a lot of the toilet paper shortages. If everyone had just bought TP as they normally did, there would have been enough to go around. Some people had closets and garages stuffed full of TP. It was ridiculous. In 1973, Johnny Carson said there was a toilet paper shortage on The Tonight Show and there was panic buying and hoarding after that as well. It was actually a joke, but people went out and emptied the shelves.
Great episode Sal! Panama Canal has a bunch of interesting facts… and a few related smart people… 1) It is well known that the Panama Canal was built ahead of schedule, below budget, and with no corruption. If any one person can be credited for this achievement it is George W. Goethals, the project's chief engineer, 1907−15. 2) John Frank Stevens, (born April 25, 1853, near West Gardiner, Maine, U.S.-died June 2, 1943, Southern Pines, North Carolina), American civil engineer and railroad executive who, as chief engineer of the Panama Canal from late 1905 to April 1907, laid the basis for that project's successful completion. Col. John Stevens’ dad… Edwin A. Stevens….. started a technical school across the river from Manhattan… If you are familiar with this school… it is called Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, NJ A great place to learn your project engineering skills…. 😃
27:33 LOL, I was just in Savannah for a week staying on the river. Loved watching the handful of container ships move in and out. A tour guide made a point to tell us they are about to build a yet higher bridge over the river to allow bigger ships in. Had no idea the situation there was so dire!
Great episode Sal - I only found your channel when trying to understand the Suez canal authorities behaviour around the Ever Given and your take on the incident report was the best out there. Moving on from that I've learned a lot more from your fascinating insights - your knowledge, delivery and sense of humour are first rate, who knew shipping was this interesting! (Oh, yes and agree with your recommendation for Joe Franta - I've been subscribing to him for a year or so now). Are you able to do an update on the Freemantle Highway now that the smoke has cleared (so to speak!), or is it a case of waiting for the incident report to come out? With many thanks and best wishes from the UK!
Sam, thanks for presenting this information in a way that I can understand (I don't want to overstate my DEGREE of understanding.) I wondered about the super-sized container ships and the strain they were putting on our ports. What could act to push back at the shipping companies? Looks like water will be a factor. Now if we just knew how to use our rail capacity... "Precision Scheduled Railroads" are NOT the solution. It comes down to something I heard about managing to the wrong goal. This was in the wood products industry: "Managing a resource the matures in 30 years on a quarterly basis." Hope Panama can pay off the debt on those new locks!
Here is the lesson that was learned: squeaky wheel gets a drop of grease occasionally. No investment in changing and improving the bearing. Actually fixing things and improving efficiency would require accountability, and we all know that no one that recieves that "free" money wants that. They're happy to recieve what they get and vaporize that money and cry for more next year to keep pockets lined on an ongoing basis.That'ss the story of literally everything anymore. Keep the system bogged down, bureaucratic, unaccountable and running that way perpetually.
I just started the video, but im pretty sure you're going to describe the consequences of "the bullwhip effect". Basically an imbalance like supply and demand are on a teeter totter. Thanks Sal
18:45 In Corporate Finance circles, it's said as "eee-BIT-dah" (for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization). Just exaggerate the "syllables" out loud a few times and you'll have it! EBITDA measures operating performance, as opposed to financing or other things that can change the bottom line. 😎✌️
@@wgowshipping You're certainly welcome, and I'm glad that I could help! (At least once!) Threw in the meaning for those who don't like to Google or have a problem with financial engineering! 😉 ✌️😎 (Pro tip: If you use Google Bard AI, most of the time you can also get a spoken/audio answer or pronunciation, much like Google Translate. What a time to be alive! 🍻)
Saw our DoT Czar spending money in Ukraine today. My local bridge is broken, my car stuck inside a pothole, and my home is a train wreck... From the derailment across the street. 😮.
Do you see an uptick in container work for smaller ports on westcoast. Do to canal issues and then possible congestion on the major ports on westcoast.
"A bucket of water a day" hahahaha I Have Been thinking of a sort of a "system" it, s called cloud seeding. My guess is, sInce I Have never Been there is That it is pretty warm. Shower every ship whit water ON TOP of the ship will lead to increased vapouring an cloud can form
People on the move tend not to be constipated as well. A good bowl movement uses less toilet paper? Dig another canal in Central America? Replacing Panama canal?
Sal, what are West Coast cargo volumes looking like next year because of issues at the canal? Cargo that was diverted to the Gulf and East Coast coming back?
I was down there for the tail end of the Mexican Hurricane last week. Rained most evenings and nights, then a Very Solid Manageable Steady Rain for about three days? The Country I was in declared a type of National Emergency and Shut Down Most Travel and Businesses for a solid Day with Caution for their local road's or infrastructures' abilities. I did see a couple minor landslides, typical for any decent rain, but all drained well enough in my locations.
Sal, buying a cheaper brand is saving on the wrong end (?): even though it is more expensive now I still don't skimp on my TP brand: Charmin. Also, we average 48 rolls in stock to work with. We never ran out.
I was talking to a longshoreman the other week and he was telling me that Mearsk in Long Beach spent a pretty penny automating their ship to shore and shore to ship so im guessing a good chunk of the people cut (and money)was from that. He also told me what used to take 13 shifts with People now takes 26 shifts (at Mearsk)with the automated machines to turn around a ship. I dont know if he was exaggerating the point because he was sore at losing jobs or not but being 2x slower would kind of be the opposite of the reason to automate. Why would the shipping company do that? Anyway great video! always informative.
Toilet paper is probably a bad example of why shipping increased during the pandemic. Less than 8% of toilet paper used in the US comes from outside the US and most of that comes from Canada and Mexico and wouldn't be brought in by ship.
The TP is meant to discuss how the supplychain was stressed. Even though it is produced in the US, the consumption is what changed. This magnified with goods imported into the US.
Descartes Systems Group is pronounced DeKarte They're also the 5th largest software company in Canada. Descartes does, broadly, route planning, customs messages, and price management, they're not a logistics company.
I am curious - you talk about the port rankings at the end. And yet, despite dismal US port performance - the Ports and inland waterways are still one of the large US advantages in the modern world as far as moving goods and bulk price efficiency.
I am not seeing you numbers in my part of the country. UPS is way down. FedEx down. Air freight way down. Rail freight down. Trucking was down a good bit, but holding its own now.
Think about countries that are run by drug cartels. That idea is wonderful, but can you think of other countries that are more corrupt? Setting aside billions for shipping infrastructure in the presence of drug cartels?
I was single during the lockdowns and I buy the cheapest single ply because I know how to use it. When the lockdowns happen I had enough TP to last me that whole year. The only problem I had is I also use baby wipes to make sure I get extra clean and only had enough baby wipes to last maybe 2 months. So I was having trouble finding good baby wipes that I liked. Sorry to be Mr Weird but that's me and everyone I've told about the baby wipes simply don't understand
Sal, this is the body of the Advisory to Shipping by the Canal Authorities... "Based on the present and projected level of Gatun Lake for the upcoming weeks, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) announces that effective immediately and until further notice, the maximum authorized draft allowed for vessels transiting the Neopanamax locks is 15.24 m (50.0 feet) TFW" As of May 2022, the 50' draft limit remained in effect the remainder of 2022 and was reduced 6" in Feb. 2023. The 50' draft was the intended maximum draft as part of the 2016 expansion.
I have no idea when you talked to the ACP pilot, when the new locks opened the Canal was in a water shortage due to lack of rain fall as they are now. It was considerable time before Gatun Lake reached a level high enough to permit the 50' draft. I will provide the link to the Advisory to Shipping date May 6, 2022 suspending the previous draft limit, permitting the 50' draft. The 50' limit stayed in effect until February 2023. Warm regards. pancanal.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/ADV18-2022-Suspension-of-Draft-Restrictions-for-the-Neopanamax-Locks-.pdf @@wgowshipping
Oddly at the Glendale AZ BNSF yard looks to me a Significantly reduced amount of containers. Maybe 70% less??? Can anyone quantify or confirm trucks hauling from LA vs Rail?
Sal...that's earnings before tax and amortisation iirc. Perhaps catch a bit of mad money with kramer if he's still doing it? Great information as ever.
JB Hunt just made big deal with the rail lines maybe its in relation to this Panama situation and ya during the great toilet paper shortage I hauled a dry van full off it to west Coast that got loaded on a container ship but ya it crazy talk to a friend o mine the other day he was hauling a reefer load of cheese from calf to Wisconsin 😅
I think 36 (1929) cents would be about $35 today, definitely not enough to pay for the energy used to operate the lockes, let alone the manpower. The dollar really is trash, but compared to all other sovereign currencies its still King trash.
The truth is Mr. Halliburton did not negotiate the locks, in reality he primarily swam the lake portions of the Canal, about 25 milesl. The support costs for him to accomplish that no doubt far exceeded his toll!
Just a side story I just saw a half dozen or so 40’ containers loading grain in tiny Deerfield Ohio this is second time I’ve saw this Shout out Deerfield Ag Services
I’m surprised that only a few dozen ships transit the Panama Canal every day. (I don’t know why I am surprised, because I have never even thought about it.) Is there a business case for a Nicaraguan canal, in normal non-drought conditions? Would there be enough traffic? If they built it, would it attract shipping to Gulf and East Coast ports?
< 1/2% to shipping from the Infrastructure bill is not surprising. You get more PR ROI from putting the money into roads/bridges/public transport where you have 1,000's of people a day seeing the signage touting where the money is coming from. Most folks are not going to see work done at a port.
The share price of ZIM shipping in USD has fallen significantly in the last 2 years. I am hoping that the company can recover its prices over then next year.
Could you go a bit further on 'effeciency'? Is it tracking turn times of specific containers? Wouldn't it be better to measure using time and miles? Most containers in China are not traveling the same distances in their round-trip as in the USA. Port spending: Why not have a public seaport improvement tax of USD 5 on each container that uses public infrastructure? It would be trivial for the shippers on a USD 1000+ rate. It would be the same as the airport facility tax you pay every time you fly. *** Warning - Rant Below *** What pisses me off is that the ports have revenues in the tens of billions every year, but want someone else to put the money up for investments that make the ports more money. For example, the Port of Savannah had 2022 revenue of USD 833.14 million. Now if they just saved 5% a year every year to pay for their own upkeep and improvements...
Why is container volume increasing while OTR Trucking volumes are plummeting? Yellow Trucking has gone under, and a number of regional carriers are threatened.
Just a reminder Sal, the Edmund Fitzgerald put to sea for the last time today 48 years ago...Ya got anything for her in tribute? Perhaps something about the changes to maritime law and how the changes after the loss of the good ship and crew well seasoned might have saved some of them? You know, the things sailors today take for granted aboard ship.
Thank you very much for an excellent report.
(On a 10 score, today's shirt score has been rated a 10)
i agree 50mil is just enough to reseal and stripe the terminal lots in Long Beach
geezzz
But Thanks Sal.🎉
My family had a personal connection with the Fitzgerald's, as a little kid talking to Mrs. Fitz I learned of the impact to her husband who was not in the greatest of health at the time of the loss of ore carrier. I still like to listen to Gordon Lightfoot - "Wreck Of The Edmu nd Fitzgerald"
Thanks @macnachten8822 for the reminder
It doesn't seem like that long ago. Time seems to pass more quickly as I age. Technically, the Edmund Fitzgerald never put to sea. It lived it's life on the Great Lakes and never touched salt water. Probably the only change since the sinking has been some improvement in weather forecasting, reporting, communications and GPS. There was another even larger and far more deadly storm that hit the Great Lakes hardest on November 9th 1913. 19 ships were lost and over 250 people died.
_does any man know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours_
Those lyrics touched my soul.
One of your best ever!!! So comprehensive and well thought out! When I was in SriLanka (Colombo) I saw the immense new harbor and port that the Chinese had built and financed. It left Sri Lanka with a huge debt (which the Chinese are renegotiating terms of payment on as Colombo threatened default), so it doesnt surprise me that we are trying to thwart the Chinese influence by offering dollars to enhance their port/storage facilities and thus disrupt the Chinese Belt and Road. I totally agree that its shameful that the US hasnt modernized and automated our ports and in general improved our own infrastructure. Near shoring will not dramatically change the need for better and more modern ports...this is something that should have happened when we first opened the doors to imports from the Far East. Thanks again for your work on this great presentation!
FINALLY!!! Mystery solved. I never was able to understand the toilet paper thing. I worked from home before, during, and after CV - so my TP consumption was fairly stable. Thank you, Sal!
I used considerably more tp to wipe all the sht away that our government was peddling daily
I Was postulating those stadium parking lots should have opened the bathrooms... lots of unused TP.
I heard another version that the business oriented toilet came in a different size than the ones intended for home use, and weren't compatible, so while toilet paper existed and might have been in the right area, it wasn't the right kind.
@@subduedreader5627 Yep, larger rolls, but like he said, you can read a newspaper through single ply. Even so, I read all kinds of people claiming the US didn't make tp, that we imported it all, which was nonsense. It did, however, show us once again, how fragile our supply chain had become. And we couldn't wait to go right back to the same broken system as soon as we could.
To be fair, the supply chain issues are real. But in my neck of the woods, hoarding caused a lot of the toilet paper shortages. If everyone had just bought TP as they normally did, there would have been enough to go around. Some people had closets and garages stuffed full of TP. It was ridiculous. In 1973, Johnny Carson said there was a toilet paper shortage on The Tonight Show and there was panic buying and hoarding after that as well. It was actually a joke, but people went out and emptied the shelves.
Great episode Sal!
Panama Canal has a bunch of interesting facts… and a few related smart people…
1) It is well known that the Panama Canal was built ahead of schedule, below budget, and with no corruption. If any one person can be credited for this achievement it is George W. Goethals, the project's chief engineer, 1907−15.
2) John Frank Stevens, (born April 25, 1853, near West Gardiner, Maine, U.S.-died June 2, 1943, Southern Pines, North Carolina), American civil engineer and railroad executive who, as chief engineer of the Panama Canal from late 1905 to April 1907, laid the basis for that project's successful completion.
Col. John Stevens’ dad… Edwin A. Stevens….. started a technical school across the river from Manhattan…
If you are familiar with this school… it is called Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, NJ
A great place to learn your project engineering skills….
😃
"If you're going to spend money, you're going to spend in on your ass." LOL
I love that Lego globe!!!!
Truly stellar analysis and news of what directly affects us all as consumers to citizens to maritimers, thank you always!
27:33 LOL, I was just in Savannah for a week staying on the river. Loved watching the handful of container ships move in and out. A tour guide made a point to tell us they are about to build a yet higher bridge over the river to allow bigger ships in. Had no idea the situation there was so dire!
Very diplomatic to not mention panic buying of toilet paper
Thanks!
Thank you so much!
Great episode Sal - I only found your channel when trying to understand the Suez canal authorities behaviour around the Ever Given and your take on the incident report was the best out there. Moving on from that I've learned a lot more from your fascinating insights - your knowledge, delivery and sense of humour are first rate, who knew shipping was this interesting! (Oh, yes and agree with your recommendation for Joe Franta - I've been subscribing to him for a year or so now). Are you able to do an update on the Freemantle Highway now that the smoke has cleared (so to speak!), or is it a case of waiting for the incident report to come out? With many thanks and best wishes from the UK!
I've never worked in shipping, never knew anyone who did, but you explain this stuff well.
Supply web! So much more true than chain. First heard it from you Sal, thank you.
Sam, thanks for presenting this information in a way that I can understand (I don't want to overstate my DEGREE of understanding.) I wondered about the super-sized container ships and the strain they were putting on our ports. What could act to push back at the shipping companies? Looks like water will be a factor. Now if we just knew how to use our rail capacity... "Precision Scheduled Railroads" are NOT the solution.
It comes down to something I heard about managing to the wrong goal. This was in the wood products industry: "Managing a resource the matures in 30 years on a quarterly basis."
Hope Panama can pay off the debt on those new locks!
My wife and I worked from home since 2008 and the difference in our buying now is we buy in bulk and always have a box extra due to 2020.
Always spot on! Thank you Sal for the insight. You really help me looks at things with a new perspective.
Here is the lesson that was learned: squeaky wheel gets a drop of grease occasionally. No investment in changing and improving the bearing. Actually fixing things and improving efficiency would require accountability, and we all know that no one that recieves that "free" money wants that. They're happy to recieve what they get and vaporize that money and cry for more next year to keep pockets lined on an ongoing basis.That'ss the story of literally everything anymore. Keep the system bogged down, bureaucratic, unaccountable and running that way perpetually.
Thanks, keep up the good work.
I just started the video, but im pretty sure you're going to describe the consequences of "the bullwhip effect". Basically an imbalance like supply and demand are on a teeter totter.
Thanks Sal
Excellent observation.
Love the Lego globe Sal.
Thanks, Sal. Not learning lessons ... the all to frequent US policymakers' failing.
18:45 In Corporate Finance circles, it's said as "eee-BIT-dah" (for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization). Just exaggerate the "syllables" out loud a few times and you'll have it! EBITDA measures operating performance, as opposed to financing or other things that can change the bottom line. 😎✌️
Thank you. I am familiar with its meaning, I just don't say it out loud so I knew I would screw it up.
@@wgowshipping You're certainly welcome, and I'm glad that I could help! (At least once!) Threw in the meaning for those who don't like to Google or have a problem with financial engineering! 😉 ✌️😎
(Pro tip: If you use Google Bard AI, most of the time you can also get a spoken/audio answer or pronunciation, much like Google Translate. What a time to be alive! 🍻)
Enjoy your discussions. Watching from the Philippines.
Great presentations thanks
From the Mogollon Rim of Northern Arizona, Thanks Sal!
Saw our DoT Czar spending money in Ukraine today. My local bridge is broken, my car stuck inside a pothole, and my home is a train wreck... From the derailment across the street. 😮.
03:36 “ if you’re going to spend money, you’re going to spend it on your ass” 🤣
Perhaps a more meaningful metric would be net tons shipped instead of TEUs shipped because as you intimated, a TEU may only be carrying one pallet.
I appreciate your signals gathering.
Sivumut’s lighter barge dumped 20 containers in Nunavut
Do you see an uptick in container work for smaller ports on westcoast. Do to canal issues and then possible congestion on the major ports on westcoast.
Thx Sal! I love Box
Fantastic show. I'll be planning a trip to Michigan soon to get a bucket of water from their lake and see if I can ship it via FedEx to Panama.
I love when grown men can have a conversation about ship paper.
Good one SAL !!
"The shipper, the carrier, the consumer" Don't forget us stevedores/longshoremen Sal! We need volume too :)
Never forget the people who move the cargo. My apologies!
Just what we need another section on this RUclips Channel.
Thank you
Well presented. Leaves a lot to think about. Thanks.
"A bucket of water a day" hahahaha I Have Been thinking of a sort of a "system" it, s called cloud seeding. My guess is, sInce I Have never Been there is That it is pretty warm. Shower every ship whit water ON TOP of the ship will lead to increased vapouring an cloud can form
People on the move tend not to be constipated as well. A good bowl movement uses less toilet paper? Dig another canal in Central America? Replacing Panama canal?
9:30 what risk management goes into this choice it seems as though you could easily spend as much time waiting as you could going around.
LOL "If you're gonna spend money, you're gonna spend it on yer ass!" - Sal Mercogliano
Live from Legoland, it's Dr. Sal !!! 😃😄😁🙃
Sal, what are West Coast cargo volumes looking like next year because of issues at the canal? Cargo that was diverted to the Gulf and East Coast coming back?
Yeah is that coming back?
I was down there for the tail end of the Mexican Hurricane last week. Rained most evenings and nights, then a Very Solid Manageable Steady Rain for about three days? The Country I was in declared a type of National Emergency and Shut Down Most Travel and Businesses for a solid Day with Caution for their local road's or infrastructures' abilities. I did see a couple minor landslides, typical for any decent rain, but all drained well enough in my locations.
You should do a special called WTF “What The Freight” 😂
Holy cow...that is great.
I am going to do that. WTF...how did I not think of that.
This is genius.
Just trying to help a neighbor 👍
The Belt & Road Initiative already built and owns a major Sri Lanka port.
Sal, the US port inefficiencies are attributable partly to "The inmates are running the prison/asylum" or use any appropriate analogy you wish.
In australia we pronounce it “EBIT-dahh”
Great episode!
I'm seeing more cans on railroads, many double stacked 2 and 3 miles long, however that being said most of them are the 53-foot cans.
Thanks Sal!
Wilmington NC came in at 44 and is the first US port listed.
Thank sordid Sharing Blessing🇺🇸🙏✋💙
They should charge more for smaller ships if its becauae of the water. . The larger the ship, the less water needed in the lock to raise it.
Fabulous.
"if you're going to spend money you're going to spend it on your ass" Donkey Dan approves this message 😂
Sal, buying a cheaper brand is saving on the wrong end (?): even though it is more expensive now I still don't skimp on my TP brand: Charmin. Also, we average 48 rolls in stock to work with. We never ran out.
I was talking to a longshoreman the other week and he was telling me that Mearsk in Long Beach spent a pretty penny automating their ship to shore and shore to ship so im guessing a good chunk of the people cut (and money)was from that. He also told me what used to take 13 shifts with People now takes 26 shifts (at Mearsk)with the automated machines to turn around a ship. I dont know if he was exaggerating the point because he was sore at losing jobs or not but being 2x slower would kind of be the opposite of the reason to automate. Why would the shipping company do that? Anyway great video! always informative.
Love the LEGO globe...
Watching this on the toilet and i need some tp
1000th like I love the channel ❤
Toilet paper is probably a bad example of why shipping increased during the pandemic. Less than 8% of toilet paper used in the US comes from outside the US and most of that comes from Canada and Mexico and wouldn't be brought in by ship.
The TP is meant to discuss how the supplychain was stressed. Even though it is produced in the US, the consumption is what changed. This magnified with goods imported into the US.
Excellent show 👏
Thank you very much!
During the covid lock down I saw on the news fights and aggression from people buying toilet paper.
Not sure I ever saw “imported toilet paper” at stores, sure it exists, but I get the Economics behind (note the pun) what you are talking about.
Most toilet paper is domestically produced but it demonstrates the issue with the supply chain during COVID.
Descartes Systems Group is pronounced DeKarte
They're also the 5th largest software company in Canada.
Descartes does, broadly, route planning, customs messages, and price management, they're not a logistics company.
Like the new format 👍
How much capacity do the rail links /ports along the side of the canal have in terms of ships/day if shippers were willing to pay for the offload.
I am curious - you talk about the port rankings at the end. And yet, despite dismal US port performance - the Ports and inland waterways are still one of the large US advantages in the modern world as far as moving goods and bulk price efficiency.
I would have thought panic buying caused the t.p. shortage along with other consumables.
It accelerated it, but production and distribution could not keep up with it.
@@wgowshipping Thanks!
Well done
I am not seeing you numbers in my part of the country. UPS is way down. FedEx down. Air freight way down. Rail freight down. Trucking was down a good bit, but holding its own now.
Best quote ever! "if you are gonna spend money, you are going to spend it on your ass."
It's baffling why Costa Rica, Nicaragua or Mexico don't install two container ports on either coast with four to eight rail lines between them.
Think about countries that are run by drug cartels. That idea is wonderful, but can you think of other countries that are more corrupt? Setting aside billions for shipping infrastructure in the presence of drug cartels?
Republicans Mexico out read inter oceans canal Maya train project operations soon shipping read project
33,ooo. GANGS. Usa. Million members usa nicely people
Mexico shipping 1oo countries worldwide 11. Rich worldwide few year power house
I was single during the lockdowns and I buy the cheapest single ply because I know how to use it. When the lockdowns happen I had enough TP to last me that whole year. The only problem I had is I also use baby wipes to make sure I get extra clean and only had enough baby wipes to last maybe 2 months. So I was having trouble finding good baby wipes that I liked. Sorry to be Mr Weird but that's me and everyone I've told about the baby wipes simply don't understand
Sal, this is the body of the Advisory to Shipping by the Canal Authorities... "Based on the present and projected level of Gatun Lake for the upcoming weeks, the Panama Canal
Authority (ACP) announces that effective immediately and until further notice, the maximum authorized
draft allowed for vessels transiting the Neopanamax locks is 15.24 m (50.0 feet) TFW" As of May 2022, the 50' draft limit remained in effect the remainder of 2022 and was reduced 6" in Feb. 2023. The 50' draft was the intended maximum draft as part of the 2016 expansion.
I talk with a PCA pilot and he said that they have not approved a 50 ft draft ship at all.
I have no idea when you talked to the ACP pilot, when the new locks opened the Canal was in a water shortage due to lack of rain fall as they are now. It was considerable time before Gatun Lake reached a level high enough to permit the 50' draft. I will provide the link to the Advisory to Shipping date May 6, 2022 suspending the previous draft limit, permitting the 50' draft. The 50' limit stayed in effect until February 2023. Warm regards. pancanal.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/ADV18-2022-Suspension-of-Draft-Restrictions-for-the-Neopanamax-Locks-.pdf @@wgowshipping
Oddly at the Glendale AZ BNSF yard looks to me a Significantly reduced amount of containers.
Maybe 70% less???
Can anyone quantify or confirm trucks hauling from LA vs Rail?
Strange that big banks hurting and small ones tanking???
Sal...that's earnings before tax and amortisation iirc. Perhaps catch a bit of mad money with kramer if he's still doing it?
Great information as ever.
Husky Terminal shout out!
JB Hunt just made big deal with the rail lines maybe its in relation to this Panama situation and ya during the great toilet paper shortage I hauled a dry van full off it to west Coast that got loaded on a container ship but ya it crazy talk to a friend o mine the other day he was hauling a reefer load of cheese from calf to Wisconsin 😅
I think 36 (1929) cents would be about $35 today, definitely not enough to pay for the energy used to operate the lockes, let alone the manpower. The dollar really is trash, but compared to all other sovereign currencies its still King trash.
The truth is Mr. Halliburton did not negotiate the locks, in reality he primarily swam the lake portions of the Canal, about 25 milesl. The support costs for him to accomplish that no doubt far exceeded his toll!
I prefer your bias over so many other sources.
Stay simple. No flash.
The Secretary of Transportation, after failing to figure out how to lactate, is probably now trying to figure out how to potty train.
Just a side story I just saw a half dozen or so 40’ containers loading grain in tiny Deerfield Ohio this is second time I’ve saw this Shout out Deerfield Ag Services
LOL funny opening !
Love the Lego world globe.
I’m surprised that only a few dozen ships transit the Panama Canal every day. (I don’t know why I am surprised, because I have never even thought about it.)
Is there a business case for a Nicaraguan canal, in normal non-drought conditions? Would there be enough traffic? If they built it, would it attract shipping to Gulf and East Coast ports?
What maritime strategy? I thought the strategy was to "make in America". 🎉🎉🎉
< 1/2% to shipping from the Infrastructure bill is not surprising. You get more PR ROI from putting the money into roads/bridges/public transport where you have 1,000's of people a day seeing the signage touting where the money is coming from. Most folks are not going to see work done at a port.
The share price of ZIM shipping in USD has fallen significantly in the last 2 years. I am hoping that the company can recover its prices over then next year.
I agree, its a good deal for Sri Lanka. Bad deal for Americans.
is here, gave you a 👍! My notifications are on. I am a subscriber. I have received notification of your video 🙂. Audio video is good.
Thanks for subbing!
LBCT is efficient.
Could you go a bit further on 'effeciency'? Is it tracking turn times of specific containers? Wouldn't it be better to measure using time and miles? Most containers in China are not traveling the same distances in their round-trip as in the USA.
Port spending: Why not have a public seaport improvement tax of USD 5 on each container that uses public infrastructure? It would be trivial for the shippers on a USD 1000+ rate. It would be the same as the airport facility tax you pay every time you fly.
*** Warning - Rant Below ***
What pisses me off is that the ports have revenues in the tens of billions every year, but want someone else to put the money up for investments that make the ports more money. For example, the Port of Savannah had 2022 revenue of USD 833.14 million. Now if they just saved 5% a year every year to pay for their own upkeep and improvements...
I just noticed you are wearing a Campbell shirt. Is that Campbell College in NC?
Campbell University...YES!
I went to Duke and wrestled Cambell in1969-70. That was the entirety of my undefeated (1-0-0) NCAA Division 1 athletic career.
The algorithm won't let me 👍, so I make 2 here:
👍😁👍 👍😁👍
Like the globe
Why is container volume increasing while OTR Trucking volumes are plummeting? Yellow Trucking has gone under, and a number of regional carriers are threatened.
The reason for trucking failure is over capacity in the sector. Manu people jumped onto trucking and saturated the market.
Soooo....Are you saying we are importing T.P.!!?
Most TP is domestically produced but the story highlights the supplychain crisis.