Increased demand for holiday-related goods nudged the Port of Long Beach (POLB) to its most active September and busiest quarter on record, as shippers continued to move goods ahead of a labor contract deadline for seaports on the East and Gulf coasts, which resulted in a three-day strike at the start of October.
POLB’s dockworkers and terminal operators moved 829,499 TEUs in September, up just 70 TEUs from the previous record set in September 2023. September also marked the Californian port’s fourth consecutive monthly year-over-year cargo growth.
In particular, imports increased 2% to 416,999 TEUs, exports declined 12.8% to 88,289 TEUs and empty containers moving through the San Pedro Bay Port rose 1.5% to 324,211 TEUs.
“We have plenty of room across our terminals as the peak shipping season drives a record amount of cargo through this critical gateway for trans-Pacific trade,” said Port of Long Beach CEO Mario Cordero. “We are anticipating continued growth through the rest of the year as retailers stock the shelves for the winter holidays.”
Meanwhile, the Port of Long Beach has moved 6,917,373 TEUs during the first nine months of 2024, up 18.8% from the same period last year. It was also POLB’s busiest quarter overall with 2,625,747 TEUs moved between 1 July and 30 September, breaking the previous record set during the second quarter of 2022 by 78,628 TEUs.