INDUSTRY
analyst Drewry says US West Coast ports are not ready to handle ultra
large container vessels (ULCVs) following the arrival last week of the 18,000-TEU
CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin, which called at the Port of Los Angeles.
The
vessel is the largest containership to call in the US and will join the Asia-US
West Coast 'Pearl River Express' service, part of the CMA
CGM's Ocean Three network, which usually operates with 11,400
TEU ships.
Although
it is not known yet whether the ship's call at the Port of Los Angeles is just
a trial-run, the analyst pointed out that the same vessel is expected to call
at the Port of Long Beach in February 2016.
Drewry
claimed that while the story is largely "a public relations
exercise", it is significant since the ULCVs have until now only been
viable in the Asia-Europe route and an additional deployment option would give
shipping lines increased operational flexibility.
According
to the analyst, West Coast ports have much work to do to improve productivity
before being in the position to see ULCVs call on "anything other than an
ad-hoc basis", the Container Management reported.
The
analyst added that the current vessel upsizing trend in the Asia-United States
West Coast (USWC) route will continue to grow as shipping lines like Maersk
Line and China Shipping Container Lines Co., Ltd (CSCL) ordered 14,000
TEU vessels for this trade and the existing "cascade of similar ships from
Asia-Europe will also increase the average.
In
its latest weekly market analysis, Drewry said: "In truth, the arrival of
one 18,000 TEU ship, which may not even be full, won't meaningfully test the
West Coast terminals' ability to deal with such ships, but at the very least it
raises the question of what the USWC ports need to do to get there."
"Bigger
ships demand faster container handling speed and operational productivity.
However, while overall berth productivity does increase with ship size, it does
not increase directly in line," the analyst added.
"This
is because the length of ULCVs has not increased in proportion with their TEU
intake (they have got wider, deeper and stacked higher instead) meaning the
number of gantry cranes deployed per vessel cannot be increased in direct
proportion to ship sizes."
The
analyst said that despite solutions such as terminal automation and turning
ports into 24/7 operations would certainly help to improve productivity, their
implementation would demand more flexibility from the unionised dockers,
something that it claimed "seems a long way off".
According
to Drewry, letting too many mega-ships call at the USWC ports before they are
fully ready would be likely to worsen productivity and could add days to the
load and discharge time at terminals.
As
the analyst added, this would undermine the USWC ports' competitiveness
compared to the United States East Coast (USEC) ports, which are soon likely to
enjoy the benefits of the Panama Canal's expansion that is expected to almost
triple the maximum size of vessels being able to call there.
Source
: HKSG.
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