The Prince George Citizen

Prince Rupert port traffic soaring

Not even Trump’s trade tirades can slow down container traffic

-

Prince Rupert is hardly the place one would expect to find an internatio­nal gateway that’s weathering the Trump trade storm better than any other Pacific port in North America.

There’s just one bakery in the town of 12,000 people tucked away in a misty corner of western Canada. The local Walmart outlet is affectiona­tely known as “Smallmart.” Shuttered storefront­s on its main street are obstinate reminders of the collapse of its pulp and fishing industries more than a decade ago.

Yet this rainy outpost in British Columbia is the continent’s fastest-growing port for trans-Pacific trade – U.S. President Donald Trump and his tariffs be damned. In the first half of 2018, Prince Rupert’s container volumes surged by 19 per cent from the same period last year, more than any other major gateway for Asian trade in the U.S., Canada or Mexico.

“I would rather call these hiccups,” Maksim Mihic, head of Canada for Dubaibased marine operator DP World Ltd., says of the Trump trade war. His company paid $580 million three years ago to buy Fairview, Prince Rupert’s upstart container terminal that’s been snatching market share from rival ports like Seattle-Tacoma and Los Angeles. “Whenever you have a trade barrier, there’s opportunit­y – the market will find a way.”

Shippers have discovered Prince Rupert is often the quickest, most reliable, and cheapest route to get everything from Nike sneakers, Microsoft computers and John Deere tractor parts from Asian factories into the U.S. heartland. Empty containers on the return trip, in turn, create an opportunit­y for Canadian lumber and grain producers to expand exports to the world’s fastest-growing markets. The town’s proximity to Asia is a built-in advantage –up to 58 hours closer by sea than any other North American gateway – which for ships traversing the route can mean roughly one additional round-trip voyage a year.

In 2017, Prince Rupert’s port-wide volumes surged 28 per cent to a record 24 million tons. DP World’s $200 million expansion readied Fairview to accept the largest vessels at sea, which are increasing­ly favored by shippers seeking to load more containers to reduce costs. Within months, the facility welcomed the largest ship to ever dock at a Canadian port – the Himalayas which, if vertical, would tower over Canada’s tallest building.

“We expect it’ll be another record year,” says Shaun Stevenson, the port’s chief executive officer. “We represent that opportunit­y for industries to pivot and look at the Asia-Pacific region.”

At the 24-hour container terminal, massive cranes soaring as high as a 20-story building pluck steel boxes off a ship onto a line of trucks below. Nearby, rail cars wait on track laid directly on the dock by CN, whose 32,000km network connects the Pacific coast, the Atlantic, and the Gulf of Mexico. The shiptruck-rail transfer is so seamless – unhampered by the urban congestion plaguing larger rivals like Vancouver – that two trains of goods can already be on their way before a vessel is fully unloaded.

From Prince Rupert, it’s a 90-hour shot to Chicago mostly on a natural downgrade through Canada’s sparsely populated interior, meaning rail cars rattle their way to the distributi­on heartlands of America faster than over any other competing route. So precise and consistent is the path – Microsoft says it can track arrivals almost to the minute – that the technology giant at times has shipped Chinese imports bound for California via Chicago rather than through a California port.

In the other direction, exports of containers stuffed with grains – a deviation from the traditiona­l bulk method of pouring grains directly into ships at specialize­d terminals – are booming.

“The advantage is that you can deliver the container to every corner of the market in Asia,” says Mihic. Instead of committing to a shipload of pulses, an Indian buyer can order 20 tons of lentils for distributi­on to local mom-and-pop shops, he says. “That is the advantage for Canadian exporters – that’s the untouched territory for us. It’s much more flexible.”

The advantage is that you can deliver the container to every corner of the market in Asia. That is the advantage for Canadian exporters – that’s the untouched territory for us. It’s much more flexible. — Maksim Mihic DP World Ltd.

Still, some aren’t convinced that Trump’s trade battles with China, Europe and Canada won’t hamper port shipments at some point. Port officials across the region “don’t want to think that tariffs will expand beyond those already in place and that even those tariffs will be unwound fairly soon,” says Jock O’Connell, a internatio­nal trade consultant and adviser to Los Angeles-based Beacon Economics. “I’m not that optimistic.”

“Any port that serves as a major conduit for the supply chains that link the U.S. and China ought to be concerned about declines in the volume of trade – and the Port of Prince Rupert fits that descriptio­n,” he said.

In Prince Rupert, signs of apprehensi­on are hard to find.

In June – just days after Trump first threatened tariffs on $200 billion US worth of Chinese imports after earlier extending steel tariffs to Canada and Mexico – DP World committed to boosting the terminal’s capacity by another third by 2022. Meanwhile, CN Rail is investing $340 million in 2018 to support that growth with more capacity.

Prince Rupert’s prominence has been a long time coming. Its extraordin­ary positionin­g was spotted in the early 1900s but its ambitions were cut short when its principal backer – Charles Melville Hays, the railroad tycoon who laid the groundwork for the critical link underpinni­ng it today – died aboard the Titanic in 1912.

“The beginning of our town was a failed dream,” says Mayor Lee Brain, who’s getting calls daily from companies seeking to set up logistics, container-stuffing and warehouse businesses near the port. “It took a hundred years but now we are the AsiaPacifi­c gateway for interconti­nental trade.”

The town’s future may now be tied to a metal container.

While tariffs and commodity cycles can strike grain, coal and oil terminals, global container traffic is surging as shippers seek to cram more products into the giant, Lego-like cubes that make freight easier and cheaper to handle.

In fact, Trump risk aside, containeri­zation has likely been a bigger driver of globalizat­ion than free trade in the post-Second World War era, boosting trade by as much as 1,240 per cent, according to one study in the Journal of Internatio­nal Economics.

“’Peak container’ isn’t on the horizon,” a McKinsey & Co. report declared last October, saying container traffic was likely to grow as long as the global economy keeps growing. “Indeed, the flexibilit­y of the container trade makes it resilient: one product may go out of fashion but another will come along to fill the box.”

Meanwhile, signs of prosperity are cropping up in Prince Rupert.

The town recently saw its first near-$1 million home – a 4,960-square-foot residence perched on a bluff overlookin­g one of the world’s deepest natural harbors, according to Nikki Morse, a local real estate agent. The mayor says so many residents are renovating their homes that the municipal landfill is running out of space.

“There are more Audis, BMWs and Mercedes driving around than in probably 30 years,” says Stevenson, the port CEO.

 ?? CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTO ?? Scandinavi­an flags fly at the Port of Prince Rupert in Prince Rupert in this August 2016 file photo.
CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTO Scandinavi­an flags fly at the Port of Prince Rupert in Prince Rupert in this August 2016 file photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada