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”The threat is real,” said Cantwell. ”The Federal Maritime Commission found that up to 27 percent of container volume moving through West Coast ports is at risk of diverting to Prince Rupert.” Canadian ports have soared from 7.8 to 13.9 percent, with expansion that will allow Prince Rupert to take more cargoes than Seattle, Tacoma and Portland combined.
A bevy of major shippers are finding a way to outflank the federal government’s Harbor Maintenance Tax, threatening thousands of jobs in the Puget Sound area and the lower Columbia River.
The strategy: Go north. Bypass the ports of Seattle, Tacoma, Everett and Portland, unload cargoes in Prince Rupert or Vancouver in British Columbia, and then ship goods into the United States.
Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., are introducing legislation that would replace the Harbor Tax with a Maritime Goods Movement User Fee, which would be levied on all cargoes coming to the United States from the Asia-Pacific market, including those that enter North America via ports in Canada and Mexico.
The purpose of replacing the existing tax was explained by Cantwell: “We need to have a level playing field for...
Three international shipping firms were fined by the California Air Resources Board after failing to shift from dirty “bunker” fuel to cleaner burning fuel when they entered into state waters.
Oslo-based Hoegh Autoliners Shipping AS Co., NCN Corp. Panama and Singapore-based Twin Phoenix Shipping S.A. received a total of $440,250 in fines after the board investigated their visits to the ports of Long Beach, Los Angeles and Stockton.
Adopted in 2008, the board’s Vessel Regulation curbs 15 tons of diesel particulate matter a day from ship exhaust.
More at the Press-Telegram
Source: Working In These Times
Source: Daily Press
Source: Muskogee Phoenix
Source: PhillyBurbs
Source: Indypendent
Source: Boston Herald
Source: Political Affairs
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