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Panama Canal Extends Transit Restrictions through September 2

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

August 16, 2023

© BlackMac / Adobe Stock

© BlackMac / Adobe Stock

The Panama Canal Authority on Wednesday notified shippers it is extending through September 2 restrictions for vessels to transit through the waterway and keeping the number of vessels authorized to pass per day to a maximum of 32.

The Canal restrictions, implemented in recent months as the rainy season in Panama has come late this year, could add more pressure on consumer goods prices, according to maritime firms and experts, as delays and extra fees add to shipping costs.

The Panama Canal is key for moving consumer goods from Asia to the United States, especially ahead of peak selling seasons like Christmas. It also allows faster transportation of U.S. commodities to Asia and South America's Pacific Coast.

On Wednesday, there were a total of 131 vessels with and without reservations lining up to transit the drought-hit waterway, fewer than the 161 ships reported a week ago, according to official statistics.

The bottleneck easing follows more slots opened last week by the Canal Authority for non booked vessels.

Under the current restrictions, vessels cannot exceed a maximum draft of 44 feet (13.41 meters). The Canal is allowing only 14 daily reservations to pass through the old locks, used by smaller ships, and 10 daily transits for the new bigger locks.

Vessels that arrive without reservation only have access to the remainder eight passage slots per day.

The Canal also is maintaining a suspension of extraordinary auctions for transit slots in both locks through Sep. 2, it said in the notification.

In normal circumstances, about 36 vessels in total are authorized to pass the Canal per day this time of the year, but prolonged drought has forced restrictions to use the navigation channel and the locks.

The Panama Canal has a 40%-market share of containers moving from Northeast Asia to the U.S. East Coast. Container ships transport most of the cargo tonnage that passes through the waterway, followed by bulk carriers and tankers carrying oil, gas and chemicals.


(Reuters - Reporting by Elida Moreno and Marianna Parraga; editing by Gary McWilliams)

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