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2016 July 11   09:08

Port of NY & NJ welcomes largest container ship ever at GCT Bayonne

Port officials and employees of GCT USA today welcomed the captain and crew of the MOL Benefactor, the first container vessel to transit the expanded Panama Canal locks and visit an East Coast port, and the largest vessel ever to call on the Port of New York and New Jersey.

This event signals a new era in shipping as the port continues to handle the largest vessels now transiting the recently expanded Panama Canal locks.

The MOL Benefactor is a new Panama class vessel boasting a 10,100 TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent units) cellular capacity. It is the first vessel to visit any East Coast port after passing through the new locks, which opened on June 26.

GCT USA completed expansion at the state-of-the-art GCT Bayonne in the summer of 2014 to ensure that the Port of New York and New Jersey would be “big ship ready” for large vessels already transiting the Suez Canal. Previously, the largest ship to call on the port was the 10,070 TEU Zim Tianjin, which arrived in spring 2015 and was also serviced by GCT Bayonne.

By contrast, the average vessel calling on the Port of New York and New Jersey today has a capacity of 5,000 TEUs. New larger ships like the MOL Benefactor will likely result in cargo coming in and out of the harbor on fewer ships. These new Panama class ships are the most advanced environmentally engineered ships afloat, dramatically reducing emissions per ship and emissions for total cargo handled.

The MOL Benefactor, a neo Panamax vessel christened in 2016, is approximately 48.6 percent more fuel efficient than a standard Panamax vessel that calls on the port.

The Port Authority of New York & New Jersey and its private sector tenants have invested approximately $6 billion in projects to prepare the port complex for new larger ships. The most critical investment is the raising of the roadway on the Bayonne Bridge, a $1.3 billion project that will increase the navigational clearance under the bridge from 151 feet to 215 feet. Ships docking at GCT Bayonne do not have to travel under the Bayonne Bridge. The bridge’s navigational clearance will be in place by the end of 2017, allowing all terminals to serve the largest ships calling the port.

In addition, a 10-year project to deepen the harbor’s channels to 50 feet will be completed this summer. The Port Authority also invested $600 million to equip port terminals with environmentally-friendly on-dock rail on top of significant investments to upgrade the port’s internal road network.

During the upcoming weeks, additional large ships from the G6 Alliance will make their maiden voyages to the Port of New York and New Jersey, calling GCT Bayonne.

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