Panama Canal expansion: fuel economy and logistical risk

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Abstract

Since cargo capacity increases faster than fuel consumption, the significantly larger capacity fleets which will accompany expansion of the Panama Canal will introduce additional fuel economies and cost savings. Enabling larger, more fuel-efficient vessels to carry cargo the entire distance from Asia to US east-coast ports allows vessel operators to realize significant and meaningful savings compared with the alternatives of using smaller Panamax vessels for the whole distance, or sending the cargo over the US land bridge by train or truck. Fuel savings are quantified along with the monetary savings based on various assumptions for the price of fuel. These savings are dramatic and will increase directly with the price of crude petroleum. Finally, microeconomic theory is deployed to determine how cost savings will be distributed between shipping customers and vessel operators.

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Mulligan, R. F., & Lombardo, G. A. (2016). Panama Canal expansion: fuel economy and logistical risk. WMU Journal of Maritime Affairs, 15(1), 5–15. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13437-014-0069-6

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