Houston Ship Channel Reopened

Monday, March 25, 2019

The U.S. Coast Guard on Monday reopened portions of the Houston Ship Channel with restrictions on waterways affected by the petrochemical leak outside Houston that has disrupted ship traffic.

The busiest U.S. oil port, shut last Friday after a chemical leak into the water, led Royal Dutch Shell Plc and LyondellBasell Industries to cut production on Monday, according to people familiar with their operations.

In a midday announcement, the Coast Guard said it is allowing daytime transits only through the ship channel, which connects the port of Houston to the Gulf of Mexico and is home to nine refineries.

"Vessels currently in the contaminated area are not authorized to depart until decontamination is complete," the Coast Guard said in a statement. It also required vessels to keep a 40-minute distance between each other.


(Reporting by Collin Eaton and Erwin Seba; Editing by Leslie Adler and Bill Berkrot)

Categories: Ports Maritime Security Casualties Maritime Safety Government Update Coastal/Inland

Related Stories

Maritime Fees Spiral Deepens as US, China Trade Blows

China Counters With Additional Port Fees for US Ships

GCMD and IAPH Forge Decarbonization Coalition Across Global Ports

Current News

Port Milwaukee Looks to 2026 Season as 2025 Comes to a Close

ABS Acquires MetaSHIP Maritime Training Assets

Oil Deliveries Disrupted by Port Congestion After Strike

Europort 2025 to Discuss Ship Finance Troubles for Offshore Wind Market

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News