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Mega Containership to Receive US Inauguration

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

February 18, 2016

CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin (Photo: Port of Long Beach)

CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin (Photo: Port of Long Beach)

Officials to inaugurate French container vessel CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin, biggest ever to visit North America
 
The largest containership ever to dock at a North American seaport has returned to Southern California. The Benjamin Franklin will officially enter service for the first time on Friday in Long Beach following an inauguration ceremony hosted by French shipping line CMA CGM and attended by elected leaders, port officials and industry executives.
 
The CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin, which has a container capacity of 18,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) or 9,000 40-foot-long boxes, arrived Thursday morning at Pier J’s Pacific Container Terminal (PCT).
 
Longshore workers are expected to move about 12,500 cargo containers on and off the Benjamin Franklin before it leaves the Port of Long Beach on February 24. The figure is two-and-a-half times the 5,000 containers that Long Beach terminals move during the call of an average-size vessel.
 
“There’s a reason the Port of Long Beach has been named this continent’s best seaport by our business partners in Asia,” said Mayor Robert Garcia. “It’s an honor that demonstrates the respect our Port and our workers have earned globally.”
 
“Our PCT terminal is just one of our facilities able to accommodate these megaships,” Board of Harbor Commissioners President Lori Ann Guzmán said. “Preparing for still larger ships, our new LBCT (Long Beach Container Terminal) Middle Harbor terminal opens this spring.”
 
The $1.3 billion Middle Harbor terminal will be the most technologically advanced in the Western Hemisphere. As a nearly all-electric, near zero emissions terminal, Long Beach’s Middle Harbor facility is a green, highly productive model for the worldwide shipping industry. Once it is fully completed in 2020, Middle Harbor will be able to move 3.3 million TEUs a year, and handle 24,000-TEU ships.
 
The project is part of an ongoing $4 billion capital program to modernize facilities at the Port of Long Beach to bring long-term, environmentally sustainable growth.
 
“The Port of Long Beach is the most direct route from Asia to U.S. markets,” said Port of Long Beach CEO Jon Slangerup. “We are strengthening our value proposition by working with all of our customers and stakeholders to optimize the speed and efficiency of our marine supply chain as we continue building the Port of the Future.”

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