U.S. helps fund California port project as export delays hurt food
makers
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[January 31, 2022] By
Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of
Agriculture said on Sunday it will help fund a new container yard for
agricultural exports at California's Port of Oakland, as the government,
ports and food companies scramble to ease costly shipping delays.
The multimillion-dollar project is set to open in March, and officials
said it could be replicated elsewhere.
Strong U.S. demand for goods from Asia during the pandemic has boosted
imports, clogging West Coast ports. Some ocean vessels have left the
United States carrying empty containers after making deliveries, rather
than waiting to fill ships with American goods for export.
Ships delivering cargo at ports in Los Angeles and Long Beach,
California, have also skipped Oakland, a major hub for agricultural
exports, to return to Asia more quickly.
Oakland's export volume in 2021 declined 8% from the previous year, the
port said, hurting shipments of products like nuts, dairy and produce.
"With the delays and disruptions that are occurring, market share is at
risk," U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told Reuters.
The Port of Oakland will open a 25-acre acre "pop-up site" to provide
space to prepare empty containers, the USDA said. The off-terminal site
will move containers off chassis and store them for rapid pick up, the
port said.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement that
"inland pop-up ports" improved the flow of goods at the Port of Savannah
and the government plans to work with other ports on similar ways to
reduce congestion.
The USDA will pay 60% of the startup costs and partner with the Port of
Oakland to partially cover a $125 per container reimbursement made to
shippers, Vilsack said. The USDA estimated the project will cost about
$5 million, and the port said the initial start-up will cost about $2
million.
"This is for however long it takes to get us back to a place where we
have some stability in the market and some stability in the supply
chain," Vilsack said.
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The city of San Francisco is seen as shipping containers are
unloaded from ships at a container terminal at the port of Oakland,
California, U.S., October 28, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Though U.S. farm exports reached a record in 2021, they could have been bigger
without delays at ports, Vilsack said.
In the first nine months of 2021, shipping disruptions cost the U.S. dairy
industry about $1.3 billion due to lost business and higher shipping and storage
costs, said Jaime Castaneda, executive vice president of the U.S. Dairy Export
Council and National Milk Producers Federation.
Some importers canceled orders because of delays, forcing U.S. producers to
resell their goods at a discount, Castaneda said.
Denver-based Leprino Foods, the world's biggest mozzarella cheese maker, had 99%
of its export shipments canceled or re-booked at least once last year, up from
10% in a typical year, Chief Executive Mike Durkin said.
Such delays contributed to a 57% surge in the company's supply-chain costs last
year, Durkin said. Costs are expected to jump another 50% in 2022, with a third
of the increase related to exports, he said.
To deal with port delays, Leprino Foods trucked dairy products normally exported
from Oakland to Houston and other ports, Durkin said. It also sent whey products
via air to a customer in Asia that needed them to keep operations running, he
said.
Durkin and dairy groups are working with the USDA, ports and shipping companies
to improve exports.
"We've got to get this somehow figured out," Durkin said. "The challenge is
huge."
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by David Gregorio)
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