NRF: U.S. Ports Remain at Near-Record Volume
June 9, 2022
Imports
at the nation’s major retail container ports should see near-record
volume again this month as retailers work to meet still-strong consumer
demand and also protect themselves against potential disruptions at West
Coast ports, according to the monthly Global Port Tracker report
released today by the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates.
“We’re in for a busy summer at the ports,” NRF Vice President for Supply
Chain and Customs Policy Jonathan Gold said. “Back-to-school supplies
are already arriving, and holiday merchandise will be right behind them.
And the big wild card is what will happen with West Coast labor
negotiations with the current contract set to expire on July 1. We
continue to encourage the parties to remain at the table until a deal is
done, but some of the surge we’ve seen may be a safeguard against any
problems that might arise.”
Imports from China should start to grow again now that the government
has relaxed its Covid Zero policy and begun to release the population of
Shanghai from a months-long lockdown, Hackett Associates Founder Ben
Hackett said.
“The anticipation is that the Chinese manufacturing and transportation
sectors will quickly get back to normal,” Hackett said. Nonetheless,
“China’s recovery will need the government’s support in order to get the
supply chain functioning normally again to provide the input required by
the manufacturing sector.”

U.S. ports covered by Global Port Tracker handled 2.26 million
Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units – one 20-foot container or its equivalent –
in April, the latest month for which final numbers are available. That
was down 3.6 percent from March’s 2.34 million TEU – the record for the
number of containers imported in a single month since NRF began tracking
imports in 2002 – but up 5.1 percent year over year.
Ports have not yet reported May numbers, but Global Port Tracker
projected the month at 2.31 million TEU, down 0.9 percent from 2.33
million TEU in May 2021, the second-busiest month on record. June is
also forecast at 2.31 million TEU, up 7.5 percent year over year, which
would leave May and June tied for the third-highest volume.
July is forecast at 2.3 million TEU, up 4.8 percent from last year;
August at 2.28 million TEU, up 0.2 percent; September at 2.13 million
TEU, down 0.4 percent, and October also at 2.13 million TEU, down 3.8
percent.
The first six months of 2022 are expected to total 13.5 million TEU, up
5.3 percent year over year. Imports for all of 2021 totaled 25.8 million
TEU, a 17.4 percent increase over 2020’s previous annual record of 22
million TEU.

How
to build a stronger and more sustainable supply chain will be addressed
as retailers, industry experts and technology innovators meet at the NRF
Supply Chain 360 conference in Cleveland June 20-21.
Global Port Tracker, which is produced for NRF by Hackett Associates,
provides historical data and forecasts for the U.S. ports of Los
Angeles/Long Beach, Oakland, Seattle and Tacoma on the West Coast; New
York/New Jersey, Port of Virginia, Charleston, Savannah, Port
Everglades, Miami and Jacksonville on the East Coast, and Houston on the
Gulf Coast.