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Home Port News Port Manatee breaks cargo records

Port Manatee breaks cargo records

PALMETTO, Fla. – Port Manatee continues to break cargo records, including handling an all-time-high of more than 9.3 million tons in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, up 19.1 percent from the immediately preceding 12-month period. That comes on the heels of a 13.4 percent tonnage rise in fiscal 2017 from fiscal 2016.

Across-the-board increases were enjoyed by the diverse Southwest Florida port in the just-ended fiscal year, besting numerous prior records, according to figures reported on Tuesday, Oct. 16.

Due largely to a more-than-tripling of phosphate rock handled, Port Manatee saw its dry bulk tonnage surge 48.5 percent for the fiscal year, reaching a record 1,970,340, while liquid bulk, the port’s largest sector, saw an 11.4 percent boost, to a record 6,207,219 tons, thanks to big gains in throughputs of gasoline and bunker fuels. Breakbulk activity for the year also established a new high point, up 9.8 percent, to 602,914 tons, propelled by a gain of 128.8 percent in wood pulp and a nearly 50 percent increase in lumber tons.

Containerized cargo tons were up as well, hitting a new pinnacle of 385,247, a 6.1 percent rise over fiscal 2017. Loaded container volume rose 2.4 percent, to 30,419 twenty-foot-equivalent units.

The record activity across all cargo sectors bears testament to the success of the diversified strategy we are implementing at Port Manatee and further adds to the impressive contributions the port makes to our region’s prosperity,” said Vanessa Baugh, chairwoman of the Manatee County Port Authority.

Port Manatee’s executive director, Carlos Buqueras, noted that the port’s fiscal 2018 activity included throughput of nearly 422 million gallons of gasoline, as well as 73 million gallons of fruit juices and 413,060 tons of fruits and vegetables, including bananas and pineapples shipped throughout the U.S. Southeast.

“Port Manatee continues to play an increasingly integral role in supplying gas to stations in Southwest Florida and in filling the refrigerators of people throughout a still-broader region,” Buqueras said. “We are delighted to build upon our trend of growing the full spectrum of cargo volumes and see the positive impact Port Manatee is having as a key cog not only in global supply chains but, moreover, in the socioeconomic wellbeing of the region we are privileged to serve.”

Located “Where Tampa Bay Meets the Gulf of Mexico,” Port Manatee is the closest U.S. deepwater seaport to the expanded Panama Canal, with 10 40-foot-draft berths serving container, bulk, breakbulk, heavylift, project and general cargo customers. The port generates more than $2.3 billion in annual economic impact for the local community, while supporting more than 24,000 jobs, without levying ad-valorem taxes.





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