Commercial Investment Real Estate March/April 2018 | Page 24

EASTERN PROMISE The expanded Panama Canal slowly shifts the balance between East and West Coast shipping volumes. by Sara S. Patterson The expansion of the Panama Canal is changing the ship- ping dynamic of the U.S. Eastern seaboard by permitting deeper ships to enter its ports. These Eastern ports may gain the competitive edge to challenge the supremacy of the West Coast ports for shipping more transit-equivalent units, the industry standard measurement for cargo con- tainer volume. However, nearly two years since the renovated Panama Canal opened in June 2016, the changes are coming slowly. Larger ships are passing through the canal to U.S. East Coast ports. The total number of transits, however, was down by 0.2 percent last year, with 46.3 million 20-foot TEUs, according to CBRE. Ultimately, the growth in cargo will resume, and the increased competition between ports on the East and West Coasts will create more flex- ibility and alternatives for distribution and warehouse users. “Like ships move slowly, shipping routes and port mar- kets also tend to change slowly,” says Craig Roberts, CCIM, real estate project manager at Port Tampa Bay in Tampa, Fla. “We invested in Post-Panamax cranes for ships from the Panama Canal and are expanding our container capac- ity. Getting our infrastructure ready is the first step.” The World Trade Organization forecasts up to 4 percent growth for shipments to and from the U.S. during 2018, driven by a sharp uptick in expected global gross domestic product growth. Currently, the West Coast claims a 52 per- cent share of U.S. TEU volume, which has declined from 54 percent in 2014 and from 57 percent in 2010. Roberts expects Port Tampa Bay to experience growth in its TEU volume during the next 10 to 20 years due to the expansion of the Panama Canal and the growth in central Florida’s Interstate 4 corridor. He anticipates