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“The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast” Bruce Lambert Institute for Trade and Transportation Studies 1
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“The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Feb 24, 2016

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Page 1: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

“The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”Bruce Lambert

Institute for Trade and Transportation Studies

1

Page 2: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Everyone wants stuff!!!

To Sustain 1 American…• 50 tons of stuff • (2 Trucks)

• 11,000 ton-miles • (driving between LA and

Charleston 5 times with 9 friends!)

• What Does It Cost • 9% of US GDP spent on logistics• 5% of Govt. Spending is

Infrastructure 2

Page 3: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

How Does the Southeast Use Transportation? 3

Page 4: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

The Southern Advantage (2003)Joe Hollingsworth, Jr.

1. The South becomes even more competitive in the world economy

2. South shifts from manufacturing to service sector which improves manufacturing

3. Migration continues as the South becomes “land of opportunity”

4. South develops knowledge based economy5. South leads way in education reform6. Contiguous counties around major

metropolitan areas will be the action in the south7. South becomes practically the only

location for automotive plants 4

Page 5: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

SASHTO States Outperformed US in … (%Change 2000-2010)

Manufacturing Logistics All Industries0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

21.3%

34.9%

47.2%

23.5%

38.3%

50.8%

United States southeast5

Page 6: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Comparison of Freight Dependency between the US, Southeast, 2010

US Average Southeast Average0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

17.5% 19.6%

18.3%18.8%

Consuming Producing6

Page 7: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

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Page 8: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Does Modes/Markets Matter? (Southeastern Average, 2007 tonnage)

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Page 9: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Do Ports Matter? 9

Page 10: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Value of Total Trade As Share of GDP, 2011

US Southeast US

11.55%12.22%

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Page 11: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Share of State Exports through a Port, 2011

TOTAL ALL

STATES

Alabam

a

Arkansas

Florid

a

Georgia

Kentucky

Louisia

na

Mississ

ippi

North Caro

lina

South Caro

lina

Tennessee

Virginia

West Virg

inia0%

10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%

100%

11

Page 12: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Share of State GDP Exported through a Port, 2011

All Stat

es

Alabam

a

Arkansas

Florid

a

Georgia

Kentucky

Louisia

na

Mississ

ippi

North Caro

lina

South Caro

lina

Tennessee

Virginia

West Virg

inia0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

12

Page 13: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

U.S. Public Port Projected Capital Expenditures by Expenditure Category for 2007-2011

General Cargo14%

Specialized General Cargo30%

Dry Bulk1%Luquid Bulk

3%

Passanger6%

Other23%

On-Terminal7%

Off-Terminal4%

Dredging10%

Security3%

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Page 14: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Does Inland Navigation Matter? 14

Page 15: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Waterway Usage- Russia, Europe and U.S., 1970-2006

1970 1990 2000 20060

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

500

Russia US EU 26

Thou

sand

Mill

ion

Tonn

e-Ki

lom

eter

s

Kilometers ShareChina 110,000 18%Russia 102,000 16%Brazil 50,000 8%United States 41,009 7%Indonesia 21,579 3%Colombia 18,000 3%Vietnam 17,702 3%European Average 52,332 8%

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Page 16: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Tenn-Tom Waterways Economic Benefit

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Page 17: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Economics and Port Needs 17

Page 18: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Maritime Needs

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Page 19: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Closures Cost Money!

NETS (IWR-USACE)• Greenup 2003 Closure (52 days)- $42 Million• Hannibal Locks 2005 Closure (5 days)-$5 Million• Lock 27 Closures

• (August 2007)-$3.9 Million• (Oct 2005-Feb 2006)- $2.7 Million

• McAlpine (August 2004)-$6.3 million

GLOBAL Insight – Upper Miss 90 Day Closure• $118.6 million for Waterway freight• $482.8 million by rail• $1.50 billion by truck

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Page 20: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

What may change existing flows or create new markets? 20

Page 21: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

What are Natural Markets?

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Page 22: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

What may change existing flows or create new markets?• In 2020?• Panama Canal Expansion• Nearshoring Trends• Exporting Natural Gas• European Collapse?• Domestic Intermodal Grows• Growth in Latin America

Economics• Dollar Continues to Slide

promoting Exports• Manufacturing Changes• Price of Fuel• Distribution Networks

• In 2040?• Economic Growth –

Regional• Consumer Markets• Resource Competition• Demographic Patterns• Energy Needs• Housing Stock• Distribution Networks• Integration

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Page 23: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Benefits of discussing the Panama Canal’s Expansion• Connecting ports and hinterlands• Connecting exports to trade markets• Discussion of regional transportation needs• Finding partners

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Page 24: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

The Heartland Corridor – Connectivity Matters

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Page 25: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

What is the Potential for Inland Waterways?

• Support future cargo or vessels • Improve system efficiency• Encourage freight mobility • Support economic growth• Connect to other modes

25

Page 26: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

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Page 27: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Needs in Southeast from Latin American Trade (LATTS)

27

Page 28: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

• What is your market? Expand or Cannibalize• What type of facility/services are needed?• Develop densities and services• Service Requirements (cargo or regulatory)• Drayage and equipment issues• Domestic and international• Shippers bear costs?• Vessel and fleet structures

What will you build/operate?

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Page 29: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Final Thoughts?• Southeast benefits • From previous investment in public and private freight

infrastructure• These facilities connect the region with world markets,

generating jobs• Maritime Activities important to the South’s economic growth• Ports support growth• Inland Navigation provide competitive advantage to the region

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Page 30: “The Demand For Transportation In The Southeast”

Bruce LambertExecutive DirectorInstitute for Trade and Transportation [email protected]

Visit ittsresearch.org for:NewsletterState StatisticsReports and Presentations

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