Ports of LA, Long Beach to end Container Dwell Fee
The San Pedro Bay ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles will phase out the option to collect a “Container Dwell Fee” on January 24, 2023.
Read moreThe San Pedro Bay ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles will phase out the option to collect a “Container Dwell Fee” on January 24, 2023.
Read moreAfter 25 months, the Marine Exchange of Southern California said that the container ship backup for the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach has ended.
Read moreA 26 meter long and 13 meter wide barge will be built by the Greenbrier Marine shipyard in Portland, Oregon, for Clean Air Engineering – Maritime, Inc. (CAE-M), which develops and operates systems that remove diesel emissions from the auxiliary engines and boilers of ocean-going vessels while at berth or anchor.
Read moreMaersk informed that the likelihood of the US implementing the “Container Dwell Fee” has risen significantly this month.
Read moreEmployers at West Coast ports at the center of the U.S. supply-chain crisis welcome the benefits of automation, saying that paid hours at the two automated terminals in the San Pedro Bay complex have increased 31.5% since 2015.
Read moreThe Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles on April 1, 2022 will begin collecting a rate of $10 per TEU on loaded import and export cargo containers hauled by drayage trucks as they enter or leave container terminals.
Read moreThe US Coast Guard worked with port partners to identify shipping containers with undeclared hazardous materials that led to a shipping container fire in the Port of Los Angeles – Long Beach, on March 4.
Read moreThe vessel queue outside of Los Angeles/Long Beach (LA/LB) recently dropped to 66 vessels from 100-105 vessels. However, data from Sea-Intelligence indicate that this may not last long.
Read moreThe Port of Los Angeles and Long Beach, in cooperation with the US government's port envoy, John Porcari, are exploring new ways to move empty containers.
Read moreContainer lines are facing a backlash from shippers ready to turn to the courts to find out who is responsible for runaway demurrage fees at Los Angeles and Long Beach ports.
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