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Port of Houston Authority

America's distribution centre
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Interglobo Far East Ltd.

Experts in tailor-made transportation solutions from Asia to the US for more than 30 years
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Fordpointer Shipping Co., Ltd.

Premium air and seafreight solutions from Hong Kong to the world!
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Orient Express Container (HK) Co., Ltd.

Trust, Service, Competitiveness and Efficiency are our promises to you. More....
 

Diversified Freight System Ltd.

Meeting your diverse range of transportation needs both flexibly and efficiently with an eye on cost.
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Dimerco Air Forwarders (H.K.) Ltd

Your China Logistics Specialist.
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Tianjin Shengyuanyujia International Forwarding

We always depend on "Efficiency, Profession and Deligence" service conception, following the enterprise spirit "To have the long, to fill one's short"
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Matson Navigation Company

The leading U.S. carriers in the Pacific. Matson provides a vital lifeline to the island economies of Hawaii, Guam and Micronesia
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Qingdao Solex Logistics Co.,Ltd.

We are the professional logistics supplier you can depend on!
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Chinatrans International Limited.

CNTRANS is professional in sea and air transportation, and aspire to be the excellent modern logistics service provider of the cost of living trade.
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Shippers and carriers realise the benefits of shipping through Houston  
   
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US data offers confusion about economic outlook for shipping's number
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Port of Portland set to take advantage of changing global economic
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Ports must view market as a marathon, not a 100-metre sprint, says
  Long Beach   
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Is the sunset of panamax vessels close at hand?

 


THE Panama Canal expansion project is scheduled to be completed in 2014. The expansion program comprises the construction of two new sets of locks - one on the Pacific and one on the Atlantic side of the canal.

After completion, the new locks will almost triple the canal's current handling ability, making it capable of processing 14,000-TEU ultra large containerships (ULCS) compared to only 5,000-TEU ships now. The throughput of the canal is expected to double by then.

So what will this mean for the fate of the panamax containership in an increasingly post-panamax world?...

Recently published figures from maritime analyst, Alphaliner, show that panamax ships are still prevailing in the Asia-US east coast (USEC) trade for services that transit the Panama Canal. A total of 133 panamaxes, accounting for 20 per cent of the panamax fleet, are deployed on this route.

As a whole the transpacific trade absorbs 27 per cent of the panamax fleet. In other words, only seven per cent of panamax ships sailing the transpacific route do not pass through the Panama Canal now.

But the prospects for the panamax fleet on the transpacific trade are not bright. Panamaxes are losing their edge to postpanamax vessels as the latter have offer greater economies of scale.

Postpanamaxes feature a beam of more than 32.3 metres, making them too wide to pass through the existing Panama Canal locks. So postpanamax vessels deployed on Asia-USEC loops now need to pass through the Suez Canal instead of the Panama Canal.

But when the new Panama Canal locks are open to cater for ultra large containerships of up to 14,000 TEU in 2014-15, most current panamaxes plying the Asia-USEC route will presumably be supplanted by larger vessels.

This is what has happened on a number of other trade lanes in recent years, says Alphaliner.

Besides the transpacific trade, other current Panama routes that employ panamaxes, such as the Europe-South American west coast and Asia-South American north coast, will see an influx of 6,000-9,000 TEU ships in near term.

On the Asia-Europe route the panama vessels have all but vanished from the scene. Today they account for just two per cent of the Asia-Europe fleet.

Currently, only 10 panamaxes are sailing on a single Asia-Mediterranean service. But back to 2008, there were 74 units deployed on this trade, accounting for 15 per cent of the panamax fleet.

 

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