Manila Bulletin

Remote-controlled cranes to replace men to pluck containers from ships

In California power

- By JAMES NASH and MATTHEW WINKLER (Bloomberg)

Next year, deckhands on ships docked at Middle Harbor on California’s San Pedro Bay won’t see many people on the wharf. Remote-controlled cranes towering 165 feet overhead will pluck containers from vessels’ holds, and driverless trucks guided by magnets embedded in the asphalt will carry cargo to robotic hoists in a sorting yard.

The automated future is part of an efficiency drive at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the first- and second- biggest in the U.S. They’ve been losing market share for nearly a decade to nimble rivals including Prince Rupert, British Columbia, and Savannah, Georgia. One reason: It takes four days or less to unload a ship at those ports and as many as six in Southern California.

“We need to redefine normal,” said Noel Hacegaba, a managing director of the Port of Long Beach, where the Middle Harbor terminal is nearing completion of a $1.3 billion modernizat­ion by operator Orient Overseas Internatio­nal Ltd. “We are concerned when we look at the numbers. When you’re the biggest, you have a target on your back.”

The twin ports are in a race to stay on top. A fresh threat will arrive early in 2016 when new locks and a deeper channel will give the Panama Canal room to handle big ships from Asia that want to bypass the West Coast to get to the eastern U.S.

“I don’t see that we can move increased volumes of containers with the current model,” said Chris Parvin, executive vice president of marine operations for Mediterran­ean Shipping Co. SA, which owns 465 ships and leases berthing space at Long Beach. “The only way we can do that is with increased efficiency, which is dependent on automation and technology.”

The Port of Los Angeles recently put an automated terminal into service, and along with the adjacent Port of Long Beach is spending $3.7 billion to boost capacity and unravel bottleneck­s that strand ships in the bay and idle trucks on land. A $1 billion replacemen­t is being built for the 47-year-old Gerald Desmond Bridge, which is too low for today’s mega-vessels.

The ports, which share a harbor, moved $470 billion in cargo last year, more than double that of the nextbigges­t, the Port of New York and New Jersey. Still, their grip on the lead has been slowly loosening since 2006. Los Angeles and Long Beach handled 35.5 percent of all U.S. cargo nine years ago and today are responsibl­e for 32.8 percent.

“When Southern California loses 1 percent, it translates to a 15 percent increase for a smaller port” somewhere else, said Daniel S. Smith, a trade consultant at The Tioga Group Inc. in Moraga, California.

At the Port of Savannah, where shipments have grown 10 percent or more for 18 out of the past 24 months, traffic rose 51.5 percent in March, a record since Bloomberg began compiling data in 2009. At the Port of Prince Rupert, it was up 58.7 percent, after three straight months of double-digit expansion.

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