Import cargo volume at the US’ major container ports
is expected to begin climbing steadily through the summer but will remain below
record-setting levels seen during most of the pandemic, according to the latest
figures from the National Retail Federation's (NRF) Global Port Tracker.
Import cargo
volume at the US’ major container ports is expected to begin climbing steadily
through the summer but will remain below record-setting levels seen during most
of the pandemic, according to the latest figures from the National Retail
Federation’s (NRF) Global Port
Tracker.
The Tracker report,
released by the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates, notes that
last spring and summer were the busiest ever as consumers spent freely and
retailers brought in merchandise to meet demand.
“This year won’t repeat that,
but the numbers we’re expecting would have been considered normal before the
pandemic,” said NRF vice president for supply chain and customs policy Jonathan
Gold. “The priority at the moment is resolving labour negotiations at the West
Coast ports and avoiding any self-inflicted supply chain challenges on top of
those we’ve faced the past three years.”
NRF last month sent a
letter signed by 238 national, state and local trade associations to
President Biden encouraging further engagement by the administration in the
West Coast talks. In
addition, NRF President and CEO Matt Shay met with Port of Los Angeles
executive director Gene Seroka at NRF headquarters in Washington to hear the
latest developments regarding the status of negotiations. The contract
between the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Pacific
Maritime Association expired on 1 July. Workers remain on the job, but many
shippers have shifted cargo elsewhere to avoid any potential disruption.
“Compared with last year, the flow of import containers on the West Coast
continues to decline along with demand as carriers increasingly drop service to
Los Angeles-area ports but stretch voyages to include other ports of call to
help absorb excess capacity,” Hackett Associates founder Ben Hackett said.
“Meanwhile, freight rates have been impacted by the fall in demand, but new
ships are starting to show up and more have been ordered – a sign that carriers
expect demand will improve by the time the new vessels are delivered.” US ports
covered by Global Port Tracker handled 1.55 million Twenty-Foot Equivalent
Units – one 20-foot container or its equivalent – in February, the latest month
for which final numbers are available. That was down 14.4% from January and
down 26.8% year over year. February is historically the slowest month of the
year, but the number was the lowest since 1.53 million TEU in May 2020, when
many factories in Asia and most U.S. stores were closed due to the pandemic.
Ports have not yet reported March numbers, but Global Port Tracker projected
the month at 1.68 million TEU, down 28.2% year over year. April is forecast at
1.86 million TEU, down 18% from last year; May at 1.91 million TEU, down 20.1%;
June at 1.99 million TEU, down 11.8%; July at 2.1 million TEU, down 3.9%, and
August at 2.13 million TEU, down 5.9%.
The large year-over-year declines are skewed by unusually high volumes last
year. A 20-month streak of totals above 2 million TEU that began in 2021 –
including an all-time monthly record of 2.4 million TEU in May 2022 – didn’t
end until last November. By comparison, imports averaged 1.8 million TEU per
month during pre-pandemic 2019.
The first half of 2023 is forecast at 10.8 million TEU, down 20.2% from the
first half of 2022. Imports for all of 2022 totalled 25.5 million TEU, down
1.2% from the annual record of 25.8 million TEU set in 2021.