LNG carriers drive Panama Canal’s growth in FY21
The Panama Canal closed its fiscal year 2021 with a record-breaking annual tonnage of 516.7 million Panama Canal tons (PC/UMS), coming in 8.7% higher compared to the 2020 fiscal year and 10% above tonnage registered in FY19, the waterway’s last pre-pandemic fiscal year.
Containers led in total tonnage, while liquefied natural gas (LNG), liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), vehicle carriers and dry bulkers drove overall growth, fueling the Panama Canal’s strong FY21 amid continued supply chain disruptions and a transition to sustainable shipping.
FY21 performance
Fiscal year 2021 was marked by unprecedented supply chain challenges caused by the continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Related disruptions drove container rates to rise exponentially and production to slow down across various sectors, due to raw material shortages.
Amid this landscape, the Panama Canal saw traffic grow between October 1, 2020, and September 30, 2021, driven by LNG, LPG, containerships, dry bulkers, and vehicle carriers.
Containerships continue to reflect a surge in demand for finished consumer products, as increased purchases during the pandemic stressed supply chains and caused congestion in ports worldwide. Containerships registered 184.3 million PC/UMS tons through the Panama Canal this year, a 2% increase from tonnage compared to FY20, followed by dry bulk (90 million PC/UMS tons), chemical carriers (65 million PC/UMS tons), LNG (61 million PC/UMS tons) and LPG (52.8 million PC/UMS tons).
LNG carriers registered a 31.4% increase in tonnage through the Panama Canal, representing the largest gain across all segments. LNG also set new annual records for total tonnage and transits, in addition to monthly tonnage and transit records in January 2021, fueled by record winter temperatures in Asia.
Source: World Maritime News