Savannah’s Harbor: Prepping for ‘post-Panamax’
July 25, 2012 11:59 PM | 1631 views | 3 3 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Even if he was acting partly out of self interest, President Obama did the right thing when he announced last week that federal reviews of the Savannah Harbor expansion and similar projects at four other major ports, including Charleston, S.C., would be expedited.

The announcement was part of Obama’s push to accelerate public works projects around the country and came as he flew Thursday to campaign in Jacksonville, Fla., a politically crucial state in his re-election bid. Other ports affected are Miami, Fla., and the Port of New York and New Jersey.

The measure was suggested by the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, although it may have done so on its own initiative, rather than at his behest. After all, even with the economy tanking he has not met with that body for more than six months — although he has found time to play dozens of rounds of golf.

The Savannah project would deepen the channel of the Savannah River by five feet to 47 feet. The deeper channel will be crucial in allowing mammoth new container ships to dock there in the wake of the completion of the Panama Canal widening project, due in 2014. An estimated 62 percent of the world’s container ship capacity will consist of the so-called “post-Panamax” ships by 2030.

At present, Savannah has the shallowest depth of any of its major worldwide trading partners, even though it is the fastest-growing container port in the country.

You don’t believe the “sleepy” Savannah port is fast-growing? Just roll out your beach towel on nearby Tybee Island and watch the container ships parade past. You’ll be educated in a hurry.

The widening project would include an ecosystem mitigation plan to minimize the impact on the nearby Savannah National Wildlife Refuge.

The expedited review date for all federal permit and review decisions is now moved up to November of this year.

“This is a positive step by the administration in recognizing the importance of the Savannah Harbor Expansion Project to our nation’s economy. We must be prepared for the larger vessels of the future, and I hope we can build on this momentum and begin the actual harbor deepening in Savannah as soon as possible,” said U.S. Rep. Johnny Isakson, (R-Ga.).

True enough.

The deeper harbor obviously will benefit not just Savannah, but Georgia as a whole, including metro Atlanta. That port handles the heaviest share of Georgia’s exports and imports and is directly and indirectly responsible for hundreds of thousands of jobs in this state. The wonder is not that the Obama administration is pushing to widen it, but that the decision to expedite things has taken so long.
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reagan rules
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July 26, 2012
The Savannah harbor project makes Obama look good! That's why the Republicans in Congress should immediately put a halt to this project and return to doing what they do best, Nothing.
Just tanked?
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July 26, 2012
The economy tanked about four years ago under your President. Now you complain about a President who took an economy shedding 800 thousand jobs a month to a stable economy in an upward trend adding tens of thousands of jobs every month. He may have not fulfilled each and every promise but I would rather have President Obama than a guy who wants to take us back to the disastrous Bush economic policies.
Kim Huffman
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July 26, 2012
I agree...the writer of the main article won't even touch the fact that Republicans have stonewalled every economic effort of the president, save the ones that they have a vested interest in.....I didn't hear Isakson or Chambiss saying that this was an election ploy..I think Atlanta's mayor deserves a lot of credit for helping to bridge the gap in politics for the common good, Reed should be commended.
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