A ship is guided through the Panama Canal's Miraflores locks near Panama City on April 24, 2023. The scarcity of rainfall due to global warming has forced the Panama Canal to reduce the draft of ships passing through the interoceanic waterway, in the midst of a water supply crisis that threatens the future of this maritime route. The Alhajuela lake, in the Colon province, 50 km north of Panama City, is one of the main lakes that supplies water to the locks of the Panama Canal and is at its lowest level of recent years. (PHOTO / AFP)
LOS ANGELES / HOUSTON - Before the Ever Max ship carrying lava lamps, sofas, Halloween costumes and artificial Christmas trees could make its inaugural Panama Canal voyage this month, a historic drought forced it to drop weight by offloading hundreds of containers.
Weather-related disruptions denied the vessel, owned by shipping company Evergreen Marine from China’s Taiwan region, a chance on Aug 1 to set a record for carrying the most containers through the vital maritime shortcut that connects the Pacific and Atlantic oceans.
More than 14,000 ships crossed the canal in 2022. Container ships are the most common users of the Panama Canal and transport more than 40 percent of consumer goods traded between Northeast Asia and the US East Coast
The Panama Canal Authority has reduced maximum ship weights and daily ship crossings in a bid to conserve water. Maritime transportation experts fear such events could become the new normal as rainfall deficits in the world's fifth-wettest country spotlight climate risks affecting the ocean shipping industry that moves 80 percent of global trade.
Ship owners have the options of carrying less cargo, shifting to alternate routes that can add thousands of miles to the trip or grappling with queues that earlier this month backed up 160 vessels and delayed some ships by as much as 21 days.
The restrictions already are sending China-US spot shipping prices up as much as 36 percent amid soaring sea temperatures that climate scientists warn could supercharge extreme weather.
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"You have to wave a caution flag because the temperatures are so far above normal," said Drew Lerner, founder and senior agriculture meteorologist at World Weather, whose customers include global commodity traders.
Canal operators are on a tightrope as they work to manage maritime trade disruption and prepare for what is shaping up to be an even drier period next year, said Peter Sand, chief analyst at air and ocean freight rate benchmarking platform Xeneta.
More than 14,000 ships crossed the canal in 2022. Container ships are the most common users of the Panama Canal and transport more than 40 percent of consumer goods traded between Northeast Asia and the US East Coast.
US-bound vessels caught in the bottlenecks have carried Barbie dolls, auto parts, BYD solar panels, water treatment equipment, diabetes testing kits and other goods, according to data from Steve Ferreira, CEO of a company that audits ocean shipping bills.
Aerial view showing a boat stranded in the dried bed of Alhajuela Lake during the summer drought, in the Colon province, 50 km north of Panama City, on April 21, 2023. The scarcity of rainfall due to global warming has forced the Panama Canal to reduce the draft of ships passing through the interoceanic waterway, in the midst of a water supply crisis that threatens the future of this maritime route. The Alhajuela lake, in the Colon province, 50 km north of Panama City, is one of the main lakes that supplies water to the locks of the Panama Canal and is at its lowest level of recent years. (PHOTO / AFP)
Restrictions at the canal started earlier this year, affecting about 170 countries and virtually every type of good - including soybeans and liquefied natural gas from the United States, copper and fresh cherries from Chile, and beef from Brazil.
Bulk carriers that transport commodities from corn to iron ore, as well as tankers that move oil, fuel, gas and chemicals also are affected. Some energy companies are rerouting vessels laden with coal and liquefied natural gas to the Suez Canal.
Water watch
A naturally occurring El Nino climate pattern associated with warmer-than-usual water in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean is contributing to Panama's drought.
The area around the canal is experiencing one of the two driest years in the country's 143 years of keeping records, data from the canal authority and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) showed. Rainfall measurements around the area are 30-50 percent below normal
The area around the canal is experiencing one of the two driest years in the country's 143 years of keeping records, data from the canal authority and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) showed. Rainfall measurements around the area are 30-50 percent below normal.
Water levels in Gatun Lake, the rainfall-fed principal reservoir that floats ships through the Panama Canal's lock system, have remained below normal despite accumulation from the current rainy season.
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A potential early start to Panama's dry season and hotter-than-average temperatures typical of major El Nino events in the country could increase evaporation from Gatun Lake and result in near-record low water levels by March or April 2024, said STRI's Steven Paton.
"It's the perfect storm of events," said Paton, who has monitored rain patterns in the Central American country for more than three decades.
The frequency of major El Nino drying patterns has risen significantly during the last 25 years of the canal's 109-year history. If that continues, "it will be increasingly difficult for (the Panama Canal) to guarantee that the largest ships are going to be able to get through," Paton said.
Bracing for more cuts
Canal operators have lowered ship weight limits to accommodate lower water depth - posing a problem for large vessels like the Ever Max.
The ship was built to carry more than 8,650 40-foot (12-meter) cargo boxes. It arrived at the Pacific side of the canal over the limit even though it was only carrying the equivalent of 7,373 containers.
The vessel unloaded about 700 containers onto trains, retrieved them on the Atlantic side and continued on to the US East Coast, according to the Canal Authority and Eikon vessel tracking. Ship owner Evergreen Marine declined comment.
A ship navigates the Panama Canal in the area of Miraflores locks, in Panama City on December 16, 2022. Every time a ship crosses the Miraflores Lock, the Panama Canal's most famous gate, 200 million liters of fresh water are discharged into the sea. This operation was repeated more than 14,000 times during 2022 in this strategic passageway linking the world's two largest oceans, whose main source of energy to move ships is rainwater. (PHOTO / AFP)
Canal operators also cut the number of daily ship crossings to 32 from about 36 during normal operations since each passage requires about 50 million gallons of water, only a portion of which is recycled.
Some shipping executives are bracing for more reductions later this year, noting that in 2020 a less severe drought prompted canal operators to reduce crossings to 27 per day.
"Anyone shipping product around the world should be paying attention to possible disruptions due to climate change," said Brian Bourke, global chief commercial officer at SEKO Logistics. "The Panama Canal is just the latest example."