Cargo Dips in July at Port of Long Beach

Monday, August 12, 2019

Tariffs continue to hamper trans-Pacific trade.

Port of Long Beach cargo volumes last month were down from the previous July, when the number of containers moved through the harbor neared 700,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs).

The July 2019 total, 621,780 TEUs, was 9.7% less than last year. Imports decreased 9.9% to 313,350 TEUs, and exports shrank 6.8% to 111,654 TEUs. Empties were 11% lower, at 196,777 TEUs.

“The trade war is hitting the West Coast hard,” said Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero. “For more than a year, the supply chain has bent under the weight, and there’s very little give left. If the tariffs continue and escalate as planned next month, American consumers could see higher prices during the holiday season as businesses pass along their costs.”

Through July, more than 4.3 million TEUs have moved through the Port’s terminals, 7.2% fewer than at the same point last year.

Categories: Ports Finance Government Update Intermodal Containerships

Related Stories

Boskalis, Van Oord to Expand Swedish Port with $570M Dredging Job

LCA says Key Commodity Trade Up 4.5%

The Heavy Lift Group: Navigating a New Reality in Project Cargo Logistics

Current News

Port of Québec Advances 16 MW Shore Power Project for Cruise Ships

RightShip Appoints Psaltaki Chief Product Officer

Valenciaport Hackathon Highlights Growing Role of Live Port Innovation

Energy-Efficiency Measures First says DNV Maritime CEO

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News