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Midwest containers via Florida

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, November 8, 2021 11:45 AM

Backshop

 

 
rdamon

Spent some time this weekend with a friend in the industry who likened the chassis situation to a cartel operation that has been in the making for some time. Container manufacturing has greatly outpaced chassis production.  They indicated that this was a planned move to increase the cost of transportation (profits).

I heard the same container shipment price increases quoted (4-6x) mentioned in this thread.

Also, it is not so much that shipments are being redirected it is more the luck of the draw.  They indicated that right now you pay up front for shipping and they give you a 30-day window and they do not tell you what US port it will show up at until they load it on a ship.

They are currently dealing with a Washington State based shipment that came in in Baltimore, MD instead of a west coast port. So now they are forced to truck the container across the US as well as bring the empty container and chassis back east.

They also said that the railroads were no better as they already have their contracts and “could care less”

One other thing I was told is that many of the Asian based shipping companies had mothballed their older fleet instead of recycling and that they have re-activated them and that coupled with a 7-month organized work slowdown in Los Angeles has created the situation.  

Their opinion was that this is a manufactured crisis, and the end goal is to increase profits and block US trade 

 

 

 

 

Who is behind this far-reaching conspiracy?

 

 

Sometimes conspiracies are true but mostly they are created to fill the void where there is a paucity of facts and lack of the abilities to comprehend complicated situations..

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Posted by rdamon on Monday, November 8, 2021 10:54 AM

Backshop

  

Who is behind this far-reaching conspiracy?

 

 

 
Don't think that it is very far-reaching there are not many players in this game
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Posted by Backshop on Monday, November 8, 2021 9:05 AM

rdamon

Spent some time this weekend with a friend in the industry who likened the chassis situation to a cartel operation that has been in the making for some time. Container manufacturing has greatly outpaced chassis production.  They indicated that this was a planned move to increase the cost of transportation (profits).

I heard the same container shipment price increases quoted (4-6x) mentioned in this thread.

Also, it is not so much that shipments are being redirected it is more the luck of the draw.  They indicated that right now you pay up front for shipping and they give you a 30-day window and they do not tell you what US port it will show up at until they load it on a ship.

They are currently dealing with a Washington State based shipment that came in in Baltimore, MD instead of a west coast port. So now they are forced to truck the container across the US as well as bring the empty container and chassis back east.

They also said that the railroads were no better as they already have their contracts and “could care less”

One other thing I was told is that many of the Asian based shipping companies had mothballed their older fleet instead of recycling and that they have re-activated them and that coupled with a 7-month organized work slowdown in Los Angeles has created the situation.  

Their opinion was that this is a manufactured crisis, and the end goal is to increase profits and block US trade 

 

 

Who is behind this far-reaching conspiracy?

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, November 8, 2021 7:48 AM

rdamon
...

Their opinion was that this is a manufactured crisis, and the end goal is to increase profits and block US trade 

Aren't most 'economic crisis' manufactured - by some element in the supply chain for whatever the economic element that is in crisis.

Petroleum, computer chips and myriad of other products/situations - some market maker is playing those that need the commodity that is in play.

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Posted by rdamon on Monday, November 8, 2021 7:03 AM

Spent some time this weekend with a friend in the industry who likened the chassis situation to a cartel operation that has been in the making for some time. Container manufacturing has greatly outpaced chassis production.  They indicated that this was a planned move to increase the cost of transportation (profits).

I heard the same container shipment price increases quoted (4-6x) mentioned in this thread.

Also, it is not so much that shipments are being redirected it is more the luck of the draw.  They indicated that right now you pay up front for shipping and they give you a 30-day window and they do not tell you what US port it will show up at until they load it on a ship.

They are currently dealing with a Washington State based shipment that came in in Baltimore, MD instead of a west coast port. So now they are forced to truck the container across the US as well as bring the empty container and chassis back east.

They also said that the railroads were no better as they already have their contracts and “could care less”

One other thing I was told is that many of the Asian based shipping companies had mothballed their older fleet instead of recycling and that they have re-activated them and that coupled with a 7-month organized work slowdown in Los Angeles has created the situation.  

Their opinion was that this is a manufactured crisis, and the end goal is to increase profits and block US trade 

 

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Posted by tree68 on Sunday, November 7, 2021 7:17 PM

Shadow the Cats owner

Some of the newest generation of container ships are even to big for the Suez canal also. 

Hence the term "Panamax."

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, November 6, 2021 9:26 PM

Shadow the Cats owner
Some of the newest generation of container ships are even to big for the Suez canal also.  

Damage to the vessel that shut down the Suez Canal for 6 days in March 2021.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEo0_A0fLuM

 

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, November 6, 2021 11:27 AM

Panama Canal tolls - and allowable vessel sizes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FxBBE8DfJI

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Saturday, November 6, 2021 10:41 AM

Some of the newest generation of container ships are even to big for the Suez canal also.  

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 5:40 PM

rdamon
 
tree68
No question.  What crossed my mind, however, was a potential result of permanent redirection on the CA ports, ie, loss of business. 

Doesn't that mean a trip through the canal?  Seems like that would add cost.

For ships that can get through the canal.  Most of the newest, biggest are too large and must go around the tip of South America.

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 4:59 PM

rdamon
Doesn't that mean a trip through the canal?  Seems like that would add cost.

It does - I think someone linked to a resource for that earlier in the thread.

You have to add probably a week more just for steaming, if you will, to get to the east coast from the Pacific.  I think I saw one graphic that suggested two weeks.

OTOH, it costs money to have the ship just sit at anchor, too.  

People who crunch numbers for all of that will crunch the numbers and determine which option works best.

I think I've read that some east coast ports are actively soliciting their terminal capabilities.  Perhaps that includes discounts, although I've heard nothing along that line.

It will be interesting to see how this all falls out.

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Posted by rdamon on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 3:52 PM

tree68
No question.  What crossed my mind, however, was a potential result of permanent redirection on the CA ports, ie, loss of business.

Doesn't that mean a trip through the canal?  Seems like that would add cost.

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 3:06 PM

Murphy Siding
Perhaps, but that might just be for the short term. Long term, costs probably play a huge part in the decision making process.

No question.  What crossed my mind, however, was a potential result of permanent redirection on the CA ports, ie, loss of business.

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 12:44 PM
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Posted by Murphy Siding on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 12:41 PM

Murphy Siding

 

How does the movement of chassis work? If BNSF brings back empty containers from the ACME ship line, are they on chassis owned by ACME and can only ship out with ACME containers?

 

 

Looks like my brain got switched wrong and went way down the wrong track...

     When BNSF brings in empties, do they have to be stored and sent back on a specific ship of the line that owns them? Does the BNSF train have to be loaded with specific containers from the contracted shipper?

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 12:34 PM

tree68

I'm seeing reports that California ships are now arriving in Florida and Baltimore, where they are promptly unloaded...

Taking a little pressure off CA will certainly help them sort out their issues.

One might wonder, though., whether the shippers might begin to see these alternative ports as more desirable than CA...

 

Perhaps, but that might just be for the short term. Long term, costs probably play a huge part in the decision making process.

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 11:48 AM

tree68
I'm seeing reports that California ships are now arriving in Florida and Baltimore, where they are promptly unloaded...

Taking a little pressure off CA will certainly help them sort out their issues.

One might wonder, though., whether the shippers might begin to see these alternative ports as more desirable than CA...

It all depends upon the size of the ship!  If the ship can't navigate the Panama Canal the economics of ship diversion to the US East Coast are even worse.

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 11:38 AM

I'm seeing reports that California ships are now arriving in Florida and Baltimore, where they are promptly unloaded...

Taking a little pressure off CA will certainly help them sort out their issues.

One might wonder, though., whether the shippers might begin to see these alternative ports as more desirable than CA...

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Posted by Euclid on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 11:17 AM

Convicted One

 

 
Euclid
one video interviewing some head of the port workers union and when asked if they would make more progress now that they will work 24/7, he replied that they have always worked 24/7.

 

 

I wonder if there might be a scanario where both lines of thinking might be true?  At least prior to the current state of affairs, locally we had numerous  "24 hour" retailers, but if you compared staffing levels between 3 PM and 3 AM, there was  considerable difference.

 

That may be.  The union official seemed to be hedging a bit.  I recall when he was asked the question of how much improvement working 24/7 would make, he said, "We have always been open 24 hours."  I got the impression that he did not want it to seem that they had not been working hard enough prior to the new agreement to work 24/7.  I would not believe either position without proof.  Everybody that comments on this supply chain disaster probably has a personal stake in their reason for commenting.  

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Posted by Convicted One on Wednesday, November 3, 2021 9:41 AM

Euclid
one video interviewing some head of the port workers union and when asked if they would make more progress now that they will work 24/7, he replied that they have always worked 24/7.

 

I wonder if there might be a scanario where both lines of thinking might be true?  At least prior to the current state of affairs, locally we had numerous  "24 hour" retailers, but if you compared staffing levels between 3 PM and 3 AM, there was  considerable difference.

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 10:39 PM

The 11 PM news this evening reported that the Port of Baltimore has attracted 14 rerouted California vessels in the recent past.  The vessels were able to make a regular port call with normal docking, unloading, loading and sailing.  PoB is actively seeking reroutes.

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Posted by Euclid on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 5:48 PM

Convicted One

 

 
Euclid
If the failure to return containers is due to some kind of gridlock that makes return impossible, I can understand the agreement being broken.  But then if that is the case, imposing fines for failure to return containers is a stupid remedy that cannot work.  

 

 

Well, at least somebody seems to believe that going to a 24 hour schedule is part of the solution. So it makes sense that they want to be able to force the ocean carriers to receive returned containers as soon as they are offered.

It would be dumb to have port employees working  overnight trying to bust the gridlock, only to have the boats say "see ya guys at 9 am". So perhaps the fines are seen as a way to assure participation?

 

Well, I have seen one video interviewing some head of the port workers union and when asked if they would make more progress now that they will work 24/7, he replied that they have always worked 24/7.

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 4:39 PM

Convicted One
 
Euclid
If the failure to return containers is due to some kind of gridlock that makes return impossible, I can understand the agreement being broken.  But then if that is the case, imposing fines for failure to return containers is a stupid remedy that cannot work.   

Well, at least somebody seems to believe that going to a 24 hour schedule is part of the solution. So it makes sense that they want to be able to force the ocean carriers to receive returned containers as soon as they are offered.

It would be dumb to have port employees working  overnight trying to bust the gridlock, only to have the boats say "see ya guys at 9 am". So perhaps the fines are seen as a way to assure participation?

Back in the day - The employees of the B&O Export Coal Pier had jobs that were bulletined for Daylight hours Monday-Friday.  Despite this, ships would tend to arrive on Friday afternoons to be loaded during the weekend - around the clock. A portion of the ships crew would get 'liberty' during the weekend.

Coal Pier personnel 'cleaned up' on Overtime earnings and tended to 'rest' on their straight time hours.  At that time Coal Pier personnel worked for money, not prestige.

Every location and labor agreement is different and the personnel performing the necessary duties are also different.

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Posted by Convicted One on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 4:01 PM

Euclid
If the failure to return containers is due to some kind of gridlock that makes return impossible, I can understand the agreement being broken.  But then if that is the case, imposing fines for failure to return containers is a stupid remedy that cannot work.  

 

Well, at least somebody seems to believe that going to a 24 hour schedule is part of the solution. So it makes sense that they want to be able to force the ocean carriers to receive returned containers as soon as they are offered.

It would be dumb to have port employees working  overnight trying to bust the gridlock, only to have the boats say "see ya guys at 9 am". So perhaps the fines are seen as a way to assure participation?

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 3:55 PM

CMStPnP
 
BaltACD
Terminal areas have finite limits - exceed the limits for whatever the reasons and the operation slows to a snails pace as each element of the terminal is fighting for and waiting on operating resources. If you have container cranes that are able to handle 60 boxes an hour and you can only supply 15 loadable chassis per hour - how fast are the container cranes?  If a drayman has to move a container 3000 feet or 30,000 feet to its needed location, how many draymen will it take to keep the terminal fluid?  It takes a tremendous amount of coordination to keep terminals (of ANY kind - railroad, trucking, UPS, FedEx, waterborne container). 

I never understood why that job is not partially automated.    They have automated Forklifts where I work and at large MFR companies, they do very well with large stacks of items placed in specific spots.    Why not automate the moves within the container port itself?    Seems to me would lower costs and probably be an overall safer operation.

The problem with terminals - all of them - no matter the mode or purpose.  Everything moving through the terminal gets handled more than one time - all for valid reasons, but more than one time never the less.  Every handling requires time and space.  What are the two things terminals never have enough of?  Time and Space.

The one thing you learn very early in 'transportation', don't move something UNLESS you know where and why you are moving it.  Moving it just because it is 'moveable' is sure fire way to tie the terminal in knotts.

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Posted by CMStPnP on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 3:16 PM

BaltACD
Terminal areas have finite limits - exceed the limits for whatever the reasons and the operation slows to a snails pace as each element of the terminal is fighting for and waiting on operating resources. If you have container cranes that are able to handle 60 boxes an hour and you can only supply 15 loadable chassis per hour - how fast are the container cranes?  If a drayman has to move a container 3000 feet or 30,000 feet to its needed location, how many draymen will it take to keep the terminal fluid?  It takes a tremendous amount of coordination to keep terminals (of ANY kind - railroad, trucking, UPS, FedEx, waterborne container).

I never understood why that job is not partially automated.    They have automated Forklifts where I work and at large MFR companies, they do very well with large stacks of items placed in specific spots.    Why not automate the moves within the container port itself?    Seems to me would lower costs and probably be an overall safer operation.

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 2:13 PM

tree68
 
Euclid

I have to wonder if the failure to return containers is a made-up problem to use as an excuse for not handling containers fast enough at the port.  

As I understand a portion of the problem - you have space to park 100 empty containers.  You have 200 empty containers to park.  The empty containers that won't fit in the space available are sitting on chassis, which are needed so full containers can be moved out, to make more room for empties.

The solution linked earlier ("5 ways") suggested establishing satellite sites for storing empties.

Terminal areas have finite limits - exceed the limits for whatever the reasons and the operation slows to a snails pace as each element of the terminal is fighting for and waiting on operating resources.

If you have container cranes that are able to handle 60 boxes an hour and you can only supply 15 loadable chassis per hour - how fast are the container cranes?  If a drayman has to move a container 3000 feet or 30,000 feet to its needed location, how many draymen will it take to keep the terminal fluid?  It takes a tremendous amount of coordination to keep terminals (of ANY kind - railroad, trucking, UPS, FedEx, waterborne container).

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Posted by Euclid on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 2:02 PM

tree68

 

 
Euclid

I have to wonder if the failure to return containers is a made-up problem to use as an excuse for not handling containers fast enough at the port. 

 

As I understand a portion of the problem - you have space to park 100 empty containers.  You have 200 empty containers to park.  The empty containers that won't fit in the space available are sitting on chassis, which are needed so full containers can be moved out, to make more room for empties.

The solution linked earlier ("5 ways") suggested establishing satellite sites for storing empties.

 

Well, a solution like that would be great, but why fine people who have no power to produce that solution?

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Posted by tree68 on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 1:37 PM

Euclid

I have to wonder if the failure to return containers is a made-up problem to use as an excuse for not handling containers fast enough at the port. 

As I understand a portion of the problem - you have space to park 100 empty containers.  You have 200 empty containers to park.  The empty containers that won't fit in the space available are sitting on chassis, which are needed so full containers can be moved out, to make more room for empties.

The solution linked earlier ("5 ways") suggested establishing satellite sites for storing empties.

LarryWhistling
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Posted by Euclid on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 1:18 PM

I have to wonder if the failure to return containers is a made-up problem to use as an excuse for not handling containers fast enough at the port. 

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