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The Panama Canal Authority reports that the number of vessels transiting the canal has increased to 34 per day.

According to a bulletin issued by the authority of the canal, the number of ships that transited the Panama Canal increased to 34 on average per day, for a total 1,021 transits, up from 33.7 on average per day in March.

According to data, transits in the first four month of 2025 remained below 36 ships per day allowed, despite the decline in fees charged by the canal for passage slots.

A severe drought that occurred between 2023 and 2024, forcing the waterway to connect the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans to implement restrictions, led to higher transit fees, and long queues of ships waiting to enter. Last year, the restrictions were lifted.

In recent months, the U.S., Panama and other countries have discussed the issue of fees and priority passage for U.S. flagged vessels after U.S. president Donald Trump criticised the high fees charged by the second largest interoceanic canal in the world and threatened to take over the waterway.

The authority of the canal is also planning projects that will expand the capacity for trans-shipment, storage, and other waterway activities. These include a pipeline to transport liquefied gas from vessels at one end to other tankers at the opposite end. The authority is expected to begin accepting bids this year.

(source: Reuters)