Port of Portland loses Zim shipping line
Port of Portland Executive Director Bill Wyatt on Wednesday will announce the loss of Zim American Integrated Shipping Services Co., one of the port's major shipping lines.
Zim started calling Portland in mid-2006, helping the port recover from the losses of "K" Line and Hyundai, which both pulled out in 2005. The shipper's Portland service connects the city to several ports in China and the Middle East.
"Our expectation is we can and will recover the lost business," said port spokeswoman Martha Richmond. "Our market is growing."
The port had been on pace for the best year of any major West Coast cargo port. As reported in the Business Journal last month, the port handled 58 percent more cargo in the first four months of this year than last year. No other West Coast port has achieved even a double-digit increase.
Some ports, such as the Port of Seattle and the Port of Oakland, have been losing cargo volumes. Experts attribute the declines to shippers returning to Southern California after the resolution of problems stemming from a 2002 strike by longshoremen.
The port set records for cargo and auto imports last year.
Zim started calling Portland in mid-2006, helping the port recover from the losses of "K" Line and Hyundai, which both pulled out in 2005. The shipper's Portland service connects the city to several ports in China and the Middle East.
"Our expectation is we can and will recover the lost business," said port spokeswoman Martha Richmond. "Our market is growing."
The port had been on pace for the best year of any major West Coast cargo port. As reported in the Business Journal last month, the port handled 58 percent more cargo in the first four months of this year than last year. No other West Coast port has achieved even a double-digit increase.
Some ports, such as the Port of Seattle and the Port of Oakland, have been losing cargo volumes. Experts attribute the declines to shippers returning to Southern California after the resolution of problems stemming from a 2002 strike by longshoremen.
The port set records for cargo and auto imports last year.