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US ports extend delivery hours as strike risk looms

U.S. ports along the East and Gulf Coasts are extending shipment hours for importers as they rush to clear freight ahead of a prospective strike by dockworkers on Oct. 1.

Ports from New York City to Virginia are likewise working on contingency plans to prevent interruptions after some 45,000 dockworkers lined up to the International Longshoremen's. Association threatened a walkout if they did not have a new. labor contract in place when the current offer ends on Sept. 30.

A potential closure of 36 ports along the East and Gulf. Coasts, including five of the 10 busiest ports in The United States and Canada,. is anticipated to choke the already strained supply chain and make. it a logistical headache for companies to divert their freight. to other areas.

Maher and Maersk's APM, which are members of. the employer working out group (USMX), stated they were keeping. their terminals at the Port of New York and New Jersey open for. 2 extra hours to clear freight.

The Port of New York and New Jersey is the busiest on the. East and Gulf Coasts. It handles usually 15,000-16,000 TEUs. ( twenty-foot equivalent systems) daily, or about $240 billion. worth of items moved each year.

We are collaborating with partners throughout the supply chain. to prepare for any possible effects, Port Authority of New. York and New Jersey (PANYNJ) representative Steve Burns stated.

Since Saturday, there were 42 container ships scheduled to. get to the Port of New York City and New Jersey, among the. biggest ports associated with the labor dispute, according to S&P. Global's maritime tracking service Sea-web. Thirteen ships are. set up to arrive after Sept. 30.

The Garden City Terminal at the Port of Savannah and the. Norfolk International Terminal at the Port of Virginia have likewise. extended their gate hours for the weekend before Sept. 30 to. clear freight.

(source: Reuters)