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International Shipping
Lower volumes decongest west coast port
Date:2026-01-14 Readers:


US west coast ports are expected to remain free of congestion in early 2026 as weak import volumes continue, reports New York's Journal of Commerce.


Container gateways on the west coast held their market share in 2025, benefiting from importers frontloading goods from Asia amid tariff uncertainty. Transit times at least two weeks shorter than east coast routings helped sustain volumes, though growth slowed sharply in the autumn.

The ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland and the Northwest Seaport Alliance handled 59.2 per cent of US imports from Asia through November, the same share as a year earlier. A record 1.2 million TEU crossed west coast docks in July, but volumes later fell by double digits.

Stakeholders applied lessons from the Covid scare, improving shipment forecasts and information sharing among carriers, terminals, truckers, railroads and warehouses. This reduced truck turn times and container dwell times, keeping operations fluid despite demand swings.

Looking ahead, inflation, declining consumer confidence and rising unemployment are expected to dampen imports from Asia. Retailers are likely to remain cautious in ordering spring and summer goods unless tariff policies become clearer, extending declines into the first half of 2026.

In Southern California, attention is turning to the redecking of the Vincent Thomas Bridge, which carries 53,000 vehicles daily into Los Angeles harbour. The project will cause closures through November and a full shutdown from November 2026 to March 2028, raising concerns about congestion backing up to terminals.

Analysts note that if container lines resume using the Suez Canal, east and gulf coast ports could recover market share lost to the west coast over the past two years.


https://www.shippingazette.com/news?news_id=9260100000284

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