Khaleej Times

Panama Canal does good for the planet

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london — Fresh from a $5.25 billion, nine-year expansion that’s upending decades-old trade routes, it turns out the Panama Canal is also doing a little good for the planet.

By offering a short-cut to deliver billions of dollars of Asianmade goods to America’s East Coast ports, the waterway has helped its shipping company customers to lower their collective carbon emissions by 17 million metric tonnes during the first full year of operation. When the expansion was planned, the authority’s internal forecast was 9.6 million tonnes, according to Alexis Rodriguez, environmen­t protection specialist at the Panama Canal Authority.

If we don’t take measures to cut pollution then we will all suffer in our pockets Alexis Rodriguez, environmen­t protection specialist at the Panama Canal Authority

For Panama, successful­ly combating climate change could be pivotal to the country’s future. The canal is filled by waters that have flowed for centuries down from the country’s mountains. There have been times in the past few years when low water levels forced the canal to impose minor restrictio­ns on the ships it allowed through.

“If we don’t take measures to cut pollution then we will all suffer in our pockets,” Rodriguez said in an interview in London, where he was attending a meeting of global government­s to discuss the shipping industry’s contributi­on to combating climate change.

As well as helping Asian manufactur­ers to deliver goods to the US east coast faster, the widened canal has redrawn commodity trade routes. America’s booming energy supplies — particular­ly liquefied gases and even oil — are flowing in the opposite direction like never before. The link can also be used to haul iron ore, coal and grains to Asia from places like Brazil, Colombia and Argentina. The boost to the environmen­t comes from the fact bigger, more efficient ships are now going through. Critically, they can shave thousands of miles off journeys, meaning they consume much less fuel.

Panama’s support for tougher environmen­tal rules for shipping, which also includes promoting limits on sulfur emissions, stems partly from a desire to avoid any longer-term threat to the canal’s water levels, Rodriguez said. —

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