Source:
https://www.freightwaves.com/news/last-minute-reprieve-lalb-delays-pulling-trigger-on-congestion-fee
"Last-minute reprieve: LA/LB delays pulling trigger on congestion fee"
"It came down to the wire, but the highly controversial Los Angeles/Long Beach congestion fee backed by the Biden administration is not happening — at least, not yet.
The ports were scheduled to begin charging ocean carriers $100 per import container starting Monday for boxes moving by truck that dwelled for nine or more days, and for boxes dwelling for six or more days that move by rail.
The charge was scheduled to escalate by $100 a day until the container left the property.
The ports announced Monday that they will “delay consideration” of the fee until Nov. 22, citing a 26% reduction in long-dwelling containers since the plan was announced on Oct. 25.
“There’s been significant improvement in clearing import containers from our docks in recent weeks,” said Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka. According to Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero,
“Clearly, everyone is working together to speed the movement of the cargo and reduce the backlog of ships off the coast as quickly as possible.”
Political risks of fee plan
Another reason the ports may not have pulled the trigger: the political peril of doing so.
Carriers explicitly stated that they would pass the cost along to importers.
As of Monday, Long Beach had 19,656 containers on its terminals that would have been charged the late fee.
There were at least 29,249 containers that would have incurred fees at the Port of Los Angeles (not including containers moving by rail that were between six and nine days late, which are not included in the data).
That means the aggregate fees to all carriers on Monday alone would have exceeded $4.8 million.
And because the proposed fee would increase daily, the aggregate cost would have quickly risen into the tens of millions per day, and would have likely topped $100 million per day by the end of the first week.
During a conference call on Friday, Hapag-Lloyd CEO Rolf Habben Jansen warned,
“If there’s cargo in those boxes that is not very valuable, you may end up with a lot of abandoned cargo that is going to stay at the terminal for much, much longer.”
Consultant Jon Monroe wrote in his weekly newsletter,
“While I understand the intention, this is really a dumb idea for one good reason:
The ports cannot measure the days that the container has been available to deliver.
“Under the current conditions, when a terminal discharges a container, it puts a percentage of the containers into closed lanes,” Monroe explained.
“Whenever a container is in a closed lane, it is unavailable for pickup by the trucker.
No appointment can be made.
Depending upon the terminal, anywhere from 20% to 80% of the containers will be put into a closed lane for an amount of time that varies.
It is not unheard of for containers to sit in a closed lane for weeks.
How will the ports account for containers that are in closed lanes?”
In a letter to the Federal Maritime Commission, the National Industrial Transportation League, representing shippers, argued,
“Importers are often prevented from removing their cargo from the terminal [on a timely basis] because of well-documented congestion-related issues such as chassis shortages, a lack of terminal appointments and empty return constraints.”
During the inaugural meeting of the National Shippers Advisory Council on Oct. 27, various members called the Los Angeles/Long Beach congestion fee plan “catastrophic,” “crazy” and “out of left field.”
Long way to go
The two port bosses cited significant progress with clearing the terminals, yet the numbers show that most of the gains occurred in late October and early November.
In recent days, the numbers have actually gotten worse.
In the port of Los Angeles, the number of containers dwelling nine day or more on Monday was up 18% from where it stood on Saturday and was the highest since last Wednesday.
The total number of containers on the port — 76,613 — is higher than the number on Nov. 4.
Containers dwelling six or more days that move by rail would also incur a fee.
In the port of Long Beach, the number of containers that were past the time limit on Monday was up 14% from Saturday.
The number is now higher than where it stood back on Nov. 6.
Containers past deadline include boxes moving by both rail and truck.
Meanwhile, cargo continues to flood into the two ports from the trans-Pacific trade lane.
On Friday, yet another record was set for the number of container ships stuck at anchor or in holding patterns off the ports: 83.
And on Monday, the average wait time at anchor for ships arriving in Los Angeles hit yet another new peak: 16.9 days."
https://www.freightwaves.com/news/last-minute-reprieve-lalb-delays-pulling-trigger-on-congestion-fee
"Last-minute reprieve: LA/LB delays pulling trigger on congestion fee"
"It came down to the wire, but the highly controversial Los Angeles/Long Beach congestion fee backed by the Biden administration is not happening — at least, not yet.
The ports were scheduled to begin charging ocean carriers $100 per import container starting Monday for boxes moving by truck that dwelled for nine or more days, and for boxes dwelling for six or more days that move by rail.
The charge was scheduled to escalate by $100 a day until the container left the property.
The ports announced Monday that they will “delay consideration” of the fee until Nov. 22, citing a 26% reduction in long-dwelling containers since the plan was announced on Oct. 25.
“There’s been significant improvement in clearing import containers from our docks in recent weeks,” said Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka. According to Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero,
“Clearly, everyone is working together to speed the movement of the cargo and reduce the backlog of ships off the coast as quickly as possible.”
Political risks of fee plan
Another reason the ports may not have pulled the trigger: the political peril of doing so.
Carriers explicitly stated that they would pass the cost along to importers.
As of Monday, Long Beach had 19,656 containers on its terminals that would have been charged the late fee.
There were at least 29,249 containers that would have incurred fees at the Port of Los Angeles (not including containers moving by rail that were between six and nine days late, which are not included in the data).
That means the aggregate fees to all carriers on Monday alone would have exceeded $4.8 million.
And because the proposed fee would increase daily, the aggregate cost would have quickly risen into the tens of millions per day, and would have likely topped $100 million per day by the end of the first week.
During a conference call on Friday, Hapag-Lloyd CEO Rolf Habben Jansen warned,
“If there’s cargo in those boxes that is not very valuable, you may end up with a lot of abandoned cargo that is going to stay at the terminal for much, much longer.”
Consultant Jon Monroe wrote in his weekly newsletter,
“While I understand the intention, this is really a dumb idea for one good reason:
The ports cannot measure the days that the container has been available to deliver.
“Under the current conditions, when a terminal discharges a container, it puts a percentage of the containers into closed lanes,” Monroe explained.
“Whenever a container is in a closed lane, it is unavailable for pickup by the trucker.
No appointment can be made.
Depending upon the terminal, anywhere from 20% to 80% of the containers will be put into a closed lane for an amount of time that varies.
It is not unheard of for containers to sit in a closed lane for weeks.
How will the ports account for containers that are in closed lanes?”
In a letter to the Federal Maritime Commission, the National Industrial Transportation League, representing shippers, argued,
“Importers are often prevented from removing their cargo from the terminal [on a timely basis] because of well-documented congestion-related issues such as chassis shortages, a lack of terminal appointments and empty return constraints.”
During the inaugural meeting of the National Shippers Advisory Council on Oct. 27, various members called the Los Angeles/Long Beach congestion fee plan “catastrophic,” “crazy” and “out of left field.”
Long way to go
The two port bosses cited significant progress with clearing the terminals, yet the numbers show that most of the gains occurred in late October and early November.
In recent days, the numbers have actually gotten worse.
In the port of Los Angeles, the number of containers dwelling nine day or more on Monday was up 18% from where it stood on Saturday and was the highest since last Wednesday.
The total number of containers on the port — 76,613 — is higher than the number on Nov. 4.
Containers dwelling six or more days that move by rail would also incur a fee.
In the port of Long Beach, the number of containers that were past the time limit on Monday was up 14% from Saturday.
The number is now higher than where it stood back on Nov. 6.
Containers past deadline include boxes moving by both rail and truck.
Meanwhile, cargo continues to flood into the two ports from the trans-Pacific trade lane.
On Friday, yet another record was set for the number of container ships stuck at anchor or in holding patterns off the ports: 83.
And on Monday, the average wait time at anchor for ships arriving in Los Angeles hit yet another new peak: 16.9 days."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.