Cargo volume continued to rise at the Port of Long Beach in November, setting the stage for a second consecutive calendar year record, the company said in a press release.
The Port handled 621,835 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) of container cargo during the month, a 1.5 percent increase compared to November 2017. Last month’s performance pushed 2018’s total TEU count to 7,349,377, making it virtually certain the Port will eclipse its record of 7,544,507 TEUs set last year. For the year to date, volumes have risen 7.3 percent.
Imports continued to outpace goods shipped overseas. Inbound cargo hit 319,877 TEUs, an increase of 0.2 percent, while exports shrank 8.4 percent to 115,774 TEUs. Empties returned to Asia swelled 11.4 percent to 186,183 TEUs.
Recent container trends — the growth of imports relative to exports, the large number of unloaded containers — illustrate how the higher tariffs imposed this year by the United States and China have impacted the flow of commerce, according to Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero.