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Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and Chinese tycoon Wang Jing on Saturday said plans to start building a $40 billion canal across the Central American country were on track for late 2014.
Their remarks appeared aimed at shooting down any idea of a delay. Nicaragua’s Canal Authority chief Manuel Coronel Kautz recently was quoted as saying work would not start on the Nicaraguan waterway until 2015.
Feasibility studies are underway in Nicaragua. But it is not yet known how the future canal might be built in mechanical and logistical terms, if it gets a final green light.
More at the Global Times

The Panama Canal handles around 5 percent of the world’s total trade – in comparison about 7.5 percent moves through Suez. The cost of moving a ship through the Panama Canal has tripled over the past five years to around $450,000 per passage for a vessel carrying 4,500 containers. Many companies are finding cheaper and faster routes to the U.S. East Coast by shipping to ports in California and then transiting goods overland by train.
The world’s biggest container shipping company, Maersk Line, has already abandoned Panama in favor of Egypt’s Suez Canal, which has no locks, and other companies are finding cheaper and faster routes to the U.S. East Coast by shipping to ports in California and then transiting goods overland by train.
The reason for the global shipping shift is not so much the construction at the Panama Canal but the exorbitant costs of crossing it, the time spent waiting to enter the canal and the already limited number of eastern U.S. ports that can service Post-Panamax ships.
Shipping goods from Shanghai to New York via Panama takes 25 to 26 days compared to 27 to 28 days through Suez, but only about 20 percent of China’s exports to the U.S....

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