Albuquerque Journal

New White House supply chain plan aims to ease delivery woes

Administra­tion to award $243M in new port grants

- BY DAVID J. LYNCH THE WASHINGTON POST

The White House announced a new “action plan” Tuesday aimed at expanding the capacity of U.S. ports and inland waterways, as persistent supply chain congestion slows goods deliveries and fuels rising prices.

Most of the new activity involves $17 billion in ports funding included in the bipartisan infrastruc­ture legislatio­n that Congress approved last week. But the administra­tion plans within the next 45 days to award $243 million in new port and marine infrastruc­ture grants, according to senior administra­tion officials, who briefed reporters on the condition of anonymity.

Port officials around the country also will be able to redirect leftover money from previous federal grants to new projects aimed at clearing bottleneck­s, under a Department of Transporta­tion initiative.

At the Port of Savannah in Georgia, officials plan to use $8 million to set up five inland lots to absorb thousands of shipping containers clogging the docks.

Containers arriving in Savannah have been sitting on the dock for an average of 8.5 days, more than twice the port’s goal. Officials now plan to clear space for incoming freight by shipping much of the backlog by truck and rail to new overflow lots in Georgia and North Carolina, according to senior administra­tion officials.

“The immediate $8 million in Savannah is not a big deal, but it might head off bigger delays there, which are not as bad as L.A., but have been growing,” said William Reinsch, author of a new supply chain study for the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “I’ve been pretty negative about (the administra­tion) lately, but this sounds like somebody actually thought through the problems and came up with some useful steps forward.”

Still, the administra­tion’s effort to highlight actions that will have limited immediate impact reflects the challenge confrontin­g the president, who is scheduled to visit the Port of Baltimore on Wednesday.

Even as supply woes spark voter angst, the private companies responsibl­e for the ports, trucks, terminals and trains that make up the nation’s goods pipeline operate beyond easy federal direction.

President Joe Biden spoke by phone Tuesday with the chief executives of top retailers and shipping companies about measures the government and industry could take to alleviate the supply chain crisis.

The heads of Walmart, Target, UPS and FedEx described for the president unspecifie­d steps that they are taking to speed goods through the system and to ensure that store shelves “are well stocked this holiday season,” the White House said.

Despite a flurry of recent White House pronouncem­ents — including talk of Southern California ports eventually operating on a 24-7 basis — bottleneck­s persist. On Monday, a near-record 77 container ships were anchored off the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, waiting for dockside space to become available.

In Savannah, more than 30,000 containers full of imported products for Americans are sitting on the docks, more than 50% above the port’s operationa­l goal, according to the Georgia Ports Authority website.

The nation’s ports, trucks and trains are handling a record volume of goods. But chronic congestion and soaring freight costs are driving prices higher for goods and services throughout the economy.

Wholesale prices in October were 8.6% higher than a year ago, the sharpest increase in the 11 years that such records have been kept, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

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