SC Ports Box Volumes Grow in November

Friday, December 15, 2017

South Carolina Ports Authority's 2018 fiscal year container volume through November grew 2.5 percent compared to last year, with 886,414 20-foot equivalent container units (TEUs) handled by the Port of Charleston since July. 

The port moved 163,592 TEUs during the month of November, with a balanced mix of import and export cargo. 
As measured in pier container volume, or the total number of boxes handled, the Port moved 92,329 containers in November. Fiscal year to date, SCPA has handled 502,063 pier containers, an increase of 2.9 percent over the same period last year.  
Inland Port Greer handled 7,308 rail moves in November. With 49,482 rail moves handled to date in FY18, the facility's growing volumes are 10.2 percent higher than last year. 
In the non-containerized cargo segment, Charleston handled 60,386 breakbulk pier tons in November, including 18,202 finished vehicles. 
"November volumes were moderate, as is seasonally typical for our port," said SCPA president and CEO Jim Newsome. "From a calendar year perspective, our TEU volume is 9 percent ahead of last year. I expect SCPA will complete 2017 with nearly double-digit growth of TEU volumes as well as Inland Port Greer rail moves, which is a strong accomplishment. We're concluding the year with significant progress achieved on the construction of our new headquarters as well as Inland Port Dillon, and look forward to the dredging of our harbor deepening project to begin in February."
Categories: Coastal/Inland Container Ships Intermodal Logistics Ports

Related Stories

Great Lakes Limestone Shipments Slip Slightly in July Amid Mixed Port Trends

Ports Urge Congress to Reverse Infrastructure Funding Cuts

Mitsui, MOL Buy Port of Nigg and Energy Firms from Global Energy Group

Current News

Baltic Index Rises, Sees Gains Across All Vessel Sizes

Cuba Maritime & Port Celebrates Three Years of Industry Innovation and Collaboration

Melvin Resigns as President of South Carolina Ports Authority

Brazil Ships More Iron Ore to China, Competitors Lag

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News