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U.S. Maritime Administration

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Presentation on theme: "U.S. Maritime Administration"— Presentation transcript:

1 U.S. Maritime Administration
Roger Bohnert Office of Intermodal System Development

2 Growing Congestion Between 1983 and 2003, total vehicle miles traveled in the US has increased almost 90%. The Interstate System, which comprises just over 1% of the Nation's total miles of roadway, carries almost 25% of all traffic. Highway congestion increased dramatically between 1983 and 2003, in both extent and duration. In the 10 most congested urban areas of the country, each rush hour traveler “pays” an annual virtual “congestion tax” of between $850 and $1,600 in lost time and fuel. Congestion in Atlanta

3 Growth in Wasted Hours Congestion has increased dramatically over the past 2 decades In the 13 largest cities, drivers spend the equivalent of almost eight work days each year stuck in traffic Annual Hours Lost to Congestion Per Peak Hour Driver Very Large Metro Areas, 1983 v. 2003 Philadelphia Hours 100 80 60 40 20 1983 2003 Atlanta Washington Dallas LA/Long Beach Chicago San Francisco Detroit Miami Boston New York Phoenix Houston City Average Source: Texas Transportation Institute, 2005 Urban Mobility Report

4 Annual Cost Of Congestion
Source: Texas Transportation Institute, Annual Urban Mobility Report, 2005

5 North American Rail Network (Bottlenecks & Congestion Areas)
Source: DOT – Federal Railroad Administration Office of Policy

6 Major Freight Truck Bottlenecks
Source: Cambridge Systematics, Inc., “An Initial Assessment of Freight Bottlenecks on Highways,” for FHWA, October 2005

7

8 Trade Growth, 1860 to 2005 Atlantic Coast Canadian Border Pacific Coast Gulf Coast Mexican Border Source: Cambridge Systematics The value of U.S. trade—measured in constant dollars by coast and land border—has grown rapidly over the last 30 years

9 Projected Port Freight Demand
Volume of trade 2004 (actual) v (unconstrained)* LA/LB 59,420 13,101 2,557 NY/NJ 15,835 1,776 Seattle 4,478 Source: DOT Office of Transportation Policy 4,396 1,798 Tacoma 1,809 5,566 Virginia 3,382 2,043 Oakland 1,860 6,639 Charleston (TEUs in thousands) 2020 2004 1,662 9,420 Savannah 6,165 1,437 2,152 1,010 Houston Miami * Forecast figures are based on an unconstrained 10-year linear regression, and do not reflect the expected capacity of each port in 2020.

10 National Strategy to Reduce Congestion
Urban Partnership Agreements Public-Private Partnerships Corridors of the Future Reducing Border Congestion Reducing Southern California Freight Congestion Increasing Aviation Capacity

11 America’s Marine Highway: A Solution

12 Congestion and Savings
MARINE HWY 1 Barge = ’ Containers ENERGY 228 Railcars DBL Stacked = ’ Containers RAIL Date sources: Gulf Intercoastal Canal Association TRUCK 456 Trucks = ’ Containers = 15 Barrels

13 Barriers to Success Competitive disadvantage posed by:
Harbor Maintenance Tax (HMT) 24-Hour Advance Notice Rule Multiple Lift Fees for Marine Transport Lack of Awareness of Marine Highway benefits Availability of Financing and Investment State/Local Authorities and Shippers Inadequate Port Infrastructure Shortage of Assets (i.e., cranes, chassis, barges, etc.) Environmental/Emissions

14 Current Administration Support
February 2007 – Testified before Congress in support of America’s Marine Highway Initiative April Maritime Administration Reorganization Established Office of Marine Highways and Passenger Services Established 10 Gateway Offices nationwide that will support America’s Marine Highways at the local and regional level Ongoing - Provide Incentives and Remove Disincentives Focus on areas where operations already exist or industry/local support is present. Consideration of Legislative and Regulatory Initiatives.

15 Current Administration Support Cont.
November 2006 – October Carrier/ Shipper Workshops November 2006 – New York, NY - Large Shippers February 2007 – Tampa, FL – Hazmat Shippers June 2007 – Oakland, CA – Inter-port movements October 2007 – Little Rock, AR –Metropolitan Planning Organizations May 2006 – U. S./Canada/Mexico Trilateral Agreement Established Steering Group to address issues and impediments Developing an “Information Clearing House” trilateral website Developing Shipper information October 2007 –Administrator to Meet with Mexican Counterpart Identify solutions that mitigate border crossing congestion Seek opportunities for marine highway operations between the U.S. and Mexico October Release Marine Highway Informational Video

16 Building the Marine Highway
Industry Solutions for the expansion of America’s Marine Highway… Contribute and participate in expanding America’s Marine Highway network. Seek job growth opportunities for Americans. Seek increased opportunities for Public-Private Partnerships. Get the Word Out – This is a Solution. Get State and Local Support. Get Shipper and Carrier Support. Focus on projects that can work in near-term to show success.

17 America’s Marine Highway Initiative Website


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