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A Record Number Of Cargo Ships Are Stuck Outside Of California As Ports Can't Keep Up


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2021 Sep 30, 1:54pm   863 views  41 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   💰tip   ignore  

https://jalopnik.com/a-record-number-of-cargo-ships-are-stuck-outside-of-cal-1847751523


Just off Southern California’s coast is a traffic jam of colossal proportions. Dozens of ships are waiting up to weeks to offload cargo in Los Angeles and Long Beach while the ports are inundated with containers of goods needing to be taken to their final destinations.

The latest shipping headache has more than 60 ships sitting idle off of the coast of Southern California, reports the Wall Street Journal. Wait times For unloading are stretching as long as three weeks.


I think this article is from yesterday. I hate articles that don't have a date on them.



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1   richwicks   2021 Sep 30, 1:55pm  

Patrick says
I think this article is from yesterday. I hate articles that don't have a date on them.


Pictures don't mean anything today anyhow, CGI is readily available to everybody.
2   AmericanKulak   2021 Sep 30, 6:43pm  

I heard this today as well.
3   SoTex   2021 Sep 30, 7:10pm  

.......... waiting all day for Shaman to comment.

I saw a video this week, they actually stretch nearly across the ocean. I think end2end thousands of miles.

Apparently Bidet (or its handlers) was working on a plan with the military to clear things out in LA and open up some old military ports.
4   Blue   2021 Oct 1, 12:17am  

Vaccine mandate must be causing labor shortages.
5   HeadSet   2021 Oct 1, 7:28am  

Target rich environment for Blackbeard.
6   Shaman   2021 Oct 1, 7:59am  

Ok, here’s the deal as I can see it from the harbor. The problem is labor, trucks, chassis, and rail cars in that order. First the labor (ILWU) has to show up. A lot of the most senior workers retired during Covid, late boomers and such. More are retiring all the time. This leaves a skills gap, because the way the ILWU has worked, the best and most skilled and highly paid jobs are reserved for the workers with the most seniority. Due to the churn, many of these skilled workers are gone at a time when everyone is needed. They’re training workers on the critical jobs (top handlers, cranes, yard cranes) around the clock but we are also seeing unprecedented shipping demand.
Then there’s logistic problems. In order to leave the port, the cans have to be loaded on chassis, which are in short supply. Or they have to be loaded on rain cars which are fully booked. We literally don’t have the infrastructure in place to handle this level of port traffic, and keep in mind that the port complex here is on track for 20 million containers moved this year. That’s a record.
7   Shaman   2021 Oct 1, 8:50am  

There’s probably half a Trillion dollars in cargo sitting off the coast of Long Beach, Huntington Beach, and Newport Beach. Yes the line goes that far south.
8   B.A.C.A.H.   2021 Oct 1, 9:01am  

Shaman says
The problem is labor, trucks, chassis, and rail cars

I don't think so.
The problem is Globalism.
9   Shaman   2021 Oct 1, 9:07am  

B.A.C.A.H. says
Shaman says
The problem is labor, trucks, chassis, and rail cars

I don't think so.
The problem is Globalism.


I guess at the root yes. But in all honesty, we haven’t got the labor over here to make all the goods we now import. 11 million jobs in the USA are going unfilled for lack of qualified applicants. I agree that we should bring back production of many if not most manufacturing. But that is going to take time and tremendous investment in robotics and industrial controlled factories.
I’m good with that, even though it would directly impact my industry. My skills would translate easily to a control systems job in a factory and I could live in a red state. Bliss!
10   Malcolm   2021 Oct 1, 9:47am  

It is pretty amazing to see in person. This is from my trip to Catalina out of Long Beach. It is surreal to see so many ships just hanging out. The area is pretty vast but you can see far on a clear day, so you really get a feel for how much crap is shipped around the word.

11   AmericanKulak   2021 Oct 1, 10:46am  

Malcolm says
It is pretty amazing to see in person. This is from my trip to Catalina out of Long Beach. It is surreal to see so many ships just hanging out. The area is pretty vast but you can see far on a clear day, so you really get a feel for how much crap is shipped around the word.


As recently as 30 years ago, 80% of that shit wouldn't be there. It was made in the USA.

That's the real shocker, IMHO.
12   Eric Holder   2021 Oct 1, 11:20am  

MisdemeanorRebellionNoCoupForYou says
Malcolm says
It is pretty amazing to see in person. This is from my trip to Catalina out of Long Beach. It is surreal to see so many ships just hanging out. The area is pretty vast but you can see far on a clear day, so you really get a feel for how much crap is shipped around the word.


As recently as 30 years ago, 80% of that shit wouldn't be there. It was made in the USA.

That's the real shocker, IMHO.


Where is the fucking AGW crowd when it comes to all this shipping traffic? These are burning shitload of FOSSIL FUELS!!!

Afreaid to anger their Chinese overlords?
14   Bd6r   2021 Oct 26, 8:58am  

Shaman says
we haven’t got the labor over here to make all the goods we now import.

cancel all Associate Vice Provosts for Student Success, Human Resource Facilitators, Diversity Coordinators, Public Relations officersetc and we will have plenty man(person)power for doing productive things. Another bonus: less useless degrees given out by universities.
16   WookieMan   2021 Nov 9, 8:20am  

zzyzzx says
Texas Filling Border Barrier Gaps With Shipping Containers

Not a bad idea really. Any barrier is better than nothing. Make China build the wall, lol.
17   Eric Holder   2021 Nov 9, 10:03am  

WookieMan says
zzyzzx says
Texas Filling Border Barrier Gaps With Shipping Containers

Not a bad idea really. Any barrier is better than nothing. Make China build the wall, lol.


Great idea, actually. They are designed to be stacked upon each other so it's fucking perfect. There is the issue of gaps between containers where the ground is uneven, of course, but it's a start in the right direction.
18   Patrick   2021 Nov 9, 10:25pm  

Yes, it's pretty clever. Pre-fab, smooth sides, hard to cut through, can be stacked.
19   Ceffer   2021 Nov 9, 10:38pm  

Cartels will probably turn them into bordellos and adrenochrome factories.
20   WookieMan   2021 Nov 9, 10:53pm  

Eric Holder says
Great idea, actually. They are designed to be stacked upon each other so it's fucking perfect. There is the issue of gaps between containers where the ground is uneven, of course, but it's a start in the right direction.

Bulldozer handles that in minutes. All that shit is automated now just like farming/crop equipment is. You could easily level the earth two miles ahead of the containers being offloaded and stacked in the matter of a couple of days. Either way a couple of weak points assumed, you just police those more.

Obviously better than a wide open border either way. And we have plenty of these fucking things sitting empty and are eye sores in urban and industrialized areas. Might not be pretty, but I'm sure the borders towns wouldn't mind it. I wouldn't mind it as Chicago is one of the largest importers of illegals beyond border states.
21   Patrick   2021 Nov 10, 9:18am  

The United States’ border with Mexico is 1,933 miles long.

Shipping containers are 40 feet long.

So it would take 1933 * 5280 / 40 = 255,156 containers to span the border.

It has been estimated that there are currently over 40 million shipping containers in the world, with several million in transit at any one time.


https://www.containercorp.ca/how-many-shipping-containers-are-there-in-the-world/

So it's totally doable.
22   HeadSet   2021 Nov 10, 9:37am  

Patrick says
The United States’ border with Mexico is 1,933 miles long.

Shipping containers are 40 feet long.

So it would take 1933 * 5280 / 40 = 255,156 containers to span the border.

It has been estimated that there are currently over 40 million shipping containers in the world, with several million in transit at any one time.

Shipping containers are not very tall, so you may need that wall stacked 2 containers high.
23   Automan Empire   2021 Nov 10, 9:43am  

Shipping containers are not very secure. Very easy to climb over and chill on top in comfort for the view if you wish. A clapped out used Blazer with a rope could tumble one out of the way, opening a 40 foot gap in under a minute, faster than a knock-off sawzall can cut through the new "border wall."

Even if there came a worldwide glut of them (rn it's a backlog of empty returns) this would be a waste of shipping containers better used elsewhere.
24   Patrick   2021 Nov 10, 9:48am  

I still think the best solution is mandatory prison time for all employers of illegals, but a wall does help.

The Great Wall of China was built for a good reason, and it was effective.

Hadrian's Wall worked as well.
25   richwicks   2021 Nov 10, 9:49am  

Automan Empire says
Even if there came a worldwide glut of them (rn it's a backlog of empty returns) this would be a waste of shipping containers better used elsewhere.


Some shipping containers ship hazardous materials, and as a result, either have to have rigorous records on what they contained, or be only used once.

Remember the crazy for "shipping container homes"? It's because often they are only used once. The containers aren't really that comfortable or large either. They are 8 feet high. My grandfather lived in a home where that ceiling was about that high, most people would consider it cramped. It's was easy to touch the ceiling. That's not very common today. By the time you put in the insulation and flooring as well as piping, it's probably 7 feet high.
26   Automan Empire   2021 Nov 10, 10:03am  

richwicks says
Remember the crazy for "shipping container homes"? It's because often they are only used once.


I watch a lot of homestead and building channels. I have yet to see a "container home" that looked worth living in. Then there was the guy who made a really cool underground game/media room/mancave in his suburban backyard that was roundly criticized as a firetrap you wouldn't dare invite people into over liability.
27   Patrick   2021 Nov 10, 11:26am  

He just needs an exit at either end.
28   joshuatrio   2021 Nov 11, 5:24am  

Automan Empire says
richwicks says
Remember the crazy for "shipping container homes"? It's because often they are only used once.


I watch a lot of homestead and building channels. I have yet to see a "container home" that looked worth living in. Then there was the guy who made a really cool underground game/media room/mancave in his suburban backyard that was roundly criticized as a firetrap you wouldn't dare invite people into over liability.


I've seen a ton that look great - but the problem to me, is that they spend forever having to modify the container to meet their needs - when building something from scratch would be significantly easier.
29   Shaman   2021 Nov 11, 6:43am  

I lived in a home made from shipping containers for almost three years in my twenties. Wasn’t ideal, and the dimensions are a bit off. But it worked for a single guy, and the rent was pretty cheap.
30   Booger   2022 Mar 6, 6:22am  

https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/shipping-company-move-operations-backlogged-california-floridas-open?source=patrick.net

Shipping firm to move operations from backlogged California to Florida's open ports

Florida has recently broken cargo container records, seen new shipping lines calling on Florida ports, and has successfully shifted cargo that would typically call on West Coast ports to the Sunshine State.
32   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 15, 12:29pm  

Booger says
https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/shipping-company-move-operations-backlogged-california-floridas-open?source=patrick.net

Shipping firm to move operations from backlogged California to Florida's open ports

Florida has recently broken cargo container records, seen new shipping lines calling on Florida ports, and has successfully shifted cargo that would typically call on West Coast ports to the Sunshine State.


Little known fact: Cape Canaveral is the second busiest port in Florida and one of the top ten on the Eastern Seaboard, it's mostly fuels, passengers (Cruises), and bulk cargo (oranges, wood pulp), not containers though.
33   Ceffer   2022 Mar 15, 12:32pm  

Shaman says
I lived in a home made from shipping containers for almost three years in my twenties. Wasn’t ideal, and the dimensions are a bit off. But it worked for a single guy, and the rent was pretty cheap.

You didn't mind the sea sickness and the squalling kidnaped hookers?
34   ForcedTQ   2022 Mar 15, 12:57pm  

richwicks says
Automan Empire says
Even if there came a worldwide glut of them (rn it's a backlog of empty returns) this would be a waste of shipping containers better used elsewhere.


Some shipping containers ship hazardous materials, and as a result, either have to have rigorous records on what they contained, or be only used once.

Remember the crazy for "shipping container homes"? It's because often they are only used once. The containers aren't really that comfortable or large either. They are 8 feet high. My grandfather lived in a home where that ceiling was about that high, most people would consider it cramped. It's was easy to touch the ceiling. That's not very common today. By the time you put in the insulation and flooring as well as piping, it's probably 7 feet high.


You can purchase HC or High Cube containers that are 9’-6” tall.
35   Hircus   2022 Mar 15, 1:19pm  

Patrick says
The United States’ border with Mexico is 1,933 miles long.

Shipping containers are 40 feet long.

So it would take 1933 * 5280 / 40 = 255,156 containers to span the border.

It has been estimated that there are currently over 40 million shipping containers in the world, with several million in transit at any one time.


https://www.containercorp.ca/how-many-shipping-containers-are-there-in-the-world/?source=patrick.net

So it's totally doable.


But shipping containers are racist.
36   zzyzzx   2022 Apr 17, 8:42am  

I was able to spot this stuck container ship yesterday while crossing westbound on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. The closer that you go to the western end, the better the view and more obvious that is was a container ship. Not necessarily the best spot to rubberneck, since it was some distance from where I was, but I happened to be be a passenger in the car so I got to rubberneck real good.

https://wtop.com/maryland/2022/04/ever-forward-ship-freed-from-chesapeake-bay-in-md/?source=patrick.net

Ever Forward ship freed from Chesapeake Bay in Maryland

The cargo ship was freed around 7 a.m. after having run aground in the bay on March 13.

Unlike the container ship that was stuck in the Suez canal, this ship didn't block anything much. I think traffic only had to be stopped when the tugboats were making their various attempts to free the ship.
37   Booger   2022 Apr 17, 5:01pm  

DooDahMan says
logistics experts say the breather is likely to be followed by a tsunami of deferred cargo once the lockdowns are lifted. The cargo volume will far exceed the handling capability of the ports, with containers jamming up terminals faster than they can be transferred to inland transport and pushing vessels into long queues at sea.


Hasn't this already happened?
38   NoYes   2022 Apr 17, 5:19pm  

California land overloaded with warehouses overfilled are going to sink it into the ocean. Americans need to buy less stuff to save CA
40   ForcedTQ   2024 Oct 1, 10:28pm  

This strategy will only work in so far as the Canadian and Mexican ports are impacted and rail and OTR trucking can’t bring those products in. Once this starts affecting exports, the corporate crew will demonize these actions…

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