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Shot from Sunset Hill, the Benjamin Franklin steams south towards Seattle |
At 2130 hours last Sunday night the largest container ship
ever to enter the Salish Sea rounded Cape Flattery and began her first ever
trip down the Strait of Juan de Fuca. She
loafed down the straits well under normal cruising speed and on Monday at 0630
passed by Shilshole. 90 minutes later the UK flagged ‘CMA-CGM Benjamin
Franklin’ berthed at Seattle’s Terminal 18.
She’s 1,309 feet long, 177 feet wide and draws 53 feet. Fully loaded she can carry 18,000 TEU’s (twenty
foot container equivalents). For comparison,
that’s roughly the entire annual volume for Limited Brands. In three trips she could hold all of Gap’s
annual product. She burns 330 Tons of
fuel each day. Within 200 miles of the
US coast she burns low Sulphur fuel and while docked the engines are turned off
and city power is utilized.
Not only was she the largest container ship to enter the
Salish Sea, she is currently the largest container ship to ever dock in North
America. Launched last December, this
was her second trip and at the moment, she can’t be filled to capacity to call
on any West Coast Port. The cranes at
the Port of Los Angeles can only lift to 133 feet high. Seattle has cranes that can lift to 145
feet. If the Benjamin Franklin was fully
loaded, she’d need cranes that could lift to 170 feet high.
This ship is only the first in a wave of mega-container ships. By way of comparison, many of the larger
container ships calling into Seattle are 8 to 10 thousand TEU’s (20 foot
containers). At 18,000 TEU’s, the
Benjamin Franklin is a quantum leap larger.
While they are more economical for carriers to move freight and
they appear to be more efficient to unload (according to data from the Journal
of Commerce) they do create challenges for terminals. Harbor depth is not an issue in Seattle, but
depth in the berth is. Considerable
infrastructure would be needed to maximize the usage of these ships.
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Approaching the ship |
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The gang plank |
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How about that for freeboard? |
This visit was a test and the initial (and very preliminary)
perception was that the Port of Seattle is rising to the challenge. The ship took a little longer to dock than
usual, so while the unloading started a little late, the productivity was
reported as ‘good’. This was merely an
informal assessment, but there didn’t appear to be any major issues as the
cranes did their work.
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The long route to the engine room |
The tour was all too brief, but a glimpse into the future of
shipping as the larger ships become more the norm.
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