The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

States not waiting for feds in a race to deepen U.S. ports

Georgia, Florida and Texas foot bill in quest to handle larger ships.

- By Lauren Etter Bloomberg

Tired of waiting for Congress, states racing to deepen seaports before the opening of the enlarged Panama Canal next year are picking up the cost of what has traditiona­lly been a federal duty.

With funding for coastal navigation channels at its lowest in a decade, port directors worry that the federal government is abandoning constructi­on and maintenanc­e of U.S. waterways just as builders churn out a new generation of massive container vessels. The so-called post-Panamax class carries loads twice the size of current ships and demand ever-deeper harbors.

At least four ports in Florida, Georgia and Texas have decided to foot the bill to deepen federal waterways, a total of almost half a billion dollars, rather than wait years for funds. To berth post-Panamax ships, ports typically need 50 feet of depth — there are only four on the U.S. East Coast. Smaller facilities are looking for an edge to gain a bigger piece of the $4.6 trillion in economic activity generated at U.S. ports last year, a quarter of the gross domestic product.

“Efficiency’s the name of the game,” said John E. Walsh, chief executive officer of the Canaveral Port Authority in Cape Canaveral, Florida, which is funding a deepening project with state and local money. “You will either be a port that can be a stop or you’re not.”

For more than a century, the U.S. government has been responsibl­e for maintainin­g navigable waterways, with Congress traditiona­lly authorizin­g projects overseen by the Army Corps of Engineers and appropriat­ing funds. In recent years, Congress has been at a partisan stalemate over everything from the Export- Import

Bank, temporaril­y shut down in July after lawmakers failed to renew its charter, to highway funding, which has been largely sustained with shortterm, last-minute measures.

Federal lawmakers have been similarly slow to approve port work and even slower to appropriat­e money. President Barack Obama’s fiscal 2016 budget request for the Army Corps’s coastal navigation-channel constructi­on program was $81 million, the least in over a decade, according to Jim Walker, director of navigation policy and legislatio­n at the Virginia-based American Associatio­n of Port Authoritie­s.

“The federal government is just funding constraine­d,” Walker said. “They’re very focused on the deficit and trying to reduce federal spending. The states just see the need to get these investment­s completed.”

The reason is the end of the “Panamax standard,” which was adopted in 1985 to accommodat­e the dimensions of the Panama Canal. Panamax ships can fit through the original width of the locks. PostPanama­x ships are wider, and require ports at least 43 feet deep. New generation­s are even bigger and require depths of 50 feet or more.

In September, Florida’s PortMiami finished dredging its waters to 52 feet, making it the deepest south of Virginia and positionin­g it as one of the first calls for post-Panamax ships. The $220 mil- lion project was funded by state and local dollars after delays in Congress led Republican Governor Rick Scott to say Florida would foot the federal government’s $77 million share and seek reimbursem­ent later.

“We’re still hopeful that we can go back to the federal government and have them reimburse the port,” said Juan Kuryla, director of PortMiami, which is only the nation’s 14th largest by volume of container traffic. “What is the likelihood of that? We have to wait and see.”

Georgia Ports Authority has been working for more than a decade on a $700 million harbor deepening along the Savannah River. The state advanced its entire $266 million share, a cost that normally would have been distribute­d over several years if federal dollars had been at hand. Now, port officials await federal money to maintain dredging already under way.

“Federal dollars have been hard to come by, and lean,” said Curtis Foltz, executive director of Georgia Ports Authority.

Not all ports are ready to let the U.S. government off the hook. The Port of Corpus Christi in Texas is trying to keep pace with increased activity related to manufactur­ing and energy production, and has gotten approval from Congress to deepen its port to 52 feet. Even though the appropriat­ions from Congress have yet to materializ­e, the port’s executive director says he has no other choice but to wait for federal money on a project that will cost more than $300 million.

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