[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 81 (Monday, May 23, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3052-S3053]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL MARITIME DAY
Mr. CASSIDY. Mr. President, yesterday, May 22, 2016, our Nation
celebrated National Maritime Day. The United States has always been and
will always be a great maritime nation. My home State of Louisiana
ranks first in the Nation in economic impact from America's domestic
maritime industry. The American Maritime Partnership shows Louisiana's
54,850 maritime jobs pump more than $11.3 billion annually into our
economy. America's robust domestic maritime industry includes vessel
operators, marine terminals, shipyards, and workers engaged in the
movement of cargo exclusively within the United States.
According to a study commissioned by the Transportation Institute and
conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers, PwC, Louisiana also ranks first in
the country in maritime jobs per capita, with 1 in every 83 jobs
connected to the State's domestic maritime industry, nearly twice that
of any other State.
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Louisiana also ranks third in the Nation in shipbuilding. According to
the U.S. Maritime Administration shipbuilding accounts for 29,250 jobs
and more than $2.23 billion in annual economic impact for our State.
However, Congress has the responsibility for ensuring that our
Nation's maritime infrastructure is adequately maintained in order for
this industry to flourish. There is no greater maritime asset in the
United States then the Mississippi River and its tributaries. They
connect over 350 million acres of farmland to world markets via
international trade through the 12,500 miles of inland navigational
channels. Much of the commodities and goods produced in the heartland
brought to world markets via the Mississippi River to the Gulf of
Mexico and beyond to foreign nations around the globe.
The Mississippi River Basin includes 41 percent of the continental
United States, and the value of the agricultural products and the large
agribusiness industry in the Mississippi River Basin produces 92
percent of the Nation's agricultural exports and 78 percent of the
world's exports in feed grains and soybeans, while 60 percent of all
grain exported from the United States is shipped via the Mississippi
River from ports throughout the region, including the Port of New
Orleans, the Port of South Louisiana, and the Port of Greater Baton
Rouge. Barge traffic and navigation on the Mississippi River also
carries a vast array of coal, fertilizer, cement, chemicals, and
petroleum products, so any significant disruption to this navigational
channel has huge consequences for the entire U.S. economy.
Unfortunately, the recent winter and spring floods in the Mississippi
River Valley have severely impeded navigational traffic along
significant stretches along the Mississippi River ship channel. For
example, at Southwest Pass along the lower Mississippi River ship
channel, the authorized draft is 47 feet, but due to the excess sand
and silt washing downstream from the flooding, the ship channel had
draft restrictions of 41 feet for a month earlier this year.
Economically, for each foot of draft loss a vessel either on the
inbound or outbound voyage must leave behind approximately $1 million,
per foot, in cargo behind. This is particularly problematic because the
last foot of draft is often where a vessel makes any profits. So during
a month timeframe, each vessel traveling along the Mississippi River at
Southwest Pass could potentially have had to leave behind $6 million in
cargo, an average of 30 vessels per day moving through the channel. An
unreliable ship channel threatens the viability of barge traffic along
the entire Mississippi River system by raising the transportation costs
to move cargo.
Navigation along the Mississippi River system is just one example of
many maritime infrastructure challenges our Nation faces. Congress has
the responsibility for providing the resources necessary to keep
America's infrastructure open for business. Inaction is not an option
if we want to keep United States competitive in the global marketplace.
Across America, the domestic maritime industry includes approximately
40,000 vessels, supports 478,440 jobs, and has an annual economic
impact of $92.5 billion. The industry also generates approximately
$92.5 billion in wages and $10 billion in tax revenues. In honor of
this quintessentially American industry and National Maritime Day, I
look forward to working with my colleagues to find solutions for
America's maritime infrastructure challenges.
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