Panama Canal to Slash Booking Slots Due to Drought

Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Daily ship crossings on the Panama Canal, one of the world's main maritime trade routes, will be further reduced over the coming months due to a severe drought, the authorities managing the canal said late on Monday.

Booking slots will be cut to 25 per day between November 3 to November 6, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) said in a shipping advisory, and will be gradually reduced further over the coming months to 18 per day beginning February 1, 2024.

In recent months, the ACP has imposed various passage restrictions to conserve water, including cutting vessel draft and daily passage authorizations.

The latest announcement comes after ship crossings were most recently reduced on Sep. 30 to 31 from 32, effective Nov 1.


(Reuters - Reporting by Eli Moreno; Writing by Brendan O'Boyle; Editing by Isabel Woodford)

Categories: South America Infrastructure Americas

Related Stories

Poland Eyes Bids to Expand Floating LNG Terminal

Chinese Sanctions on Hanwha Put $150B South Korea-US Shipbuilding Plan at Risk

Fueling the Future of Ports: Cost Savings and Resilience as Propane’s Proven Edge

Current News

Burger Boat Company Announces Promotion of Ron Cleveringa

Pedro Widmann Joins UTC Overseas

SRI Study Shows a Growing Number of Countries Implementing Cabotage Laws

Konecranes Introduces Hydrogen Fuel Cell Straddle Carrier at TOC Americas

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News