How far does 2,000 nautical miles get you? Far enough to exclude most regional trades from the US port fee. Countries such as Canada, Mexico, Jamaica, and others fall comfortably within this range when exporting to the US.
Market & Trading Calls
The blow now falls by degrees and only a fraction of US dry bulk imports is liable to the US port fee after the 17 April revision. This makes the impact more quantifiable.
The United States Trade Representative (USTR)’s initial proposal, which was agnostic to voyage distance, vessel size, or operating profile, would have triggered fees in both trade directions.
Most voyages will be exempt
Most dry bulk imports, especially on geared vessel segments on shorter routes, will be categorised under one or more exemptions under Annex II of the USTR’s Section 301. A Chinese-built dry bulk vessel will not be subject to a fee if it:
How far does 2,000 nautical miles get you?
It is far enough to exclude most regional trades. A dry bulk vessel must exceed 80k dwt and sail more than 2,000 nautical miles from a foreign port to be liable. So, if only one condition is met, it is not subject to a fee. Countries such as Canada, Mexico, Jamaica, and others described below fall comfortably within this range when exporting to the US. The list of countries is not exhaustive.
In terms of ton-miles, Canadian dry bulk exports will be the largest beneficiary of the short sea trade
Source: Kpler Insight
2024 US dry bulk imports by voyage:
At 1.5%, only a small portion and specifically targeted dry bulk import, will be impacted.
Source: Kpler Insight
The larger the import volume from the farther destination, the larger the fee
Shipments liable for port fees will be because they originate from a farther destination and are carried on vessels sized 80k+ dwt. Those that will remain exposed are generally long-haul shipments from Asia-Pacific or South America carried on larger bulkers.
The primary target: Chinese-built tonnage
Quantifying the impact based on shipbuilder origin is more straightforward. Nearly half of the US dry bulk trade volume in 2024 (import and export) was carried on Chinese-built vessels, indicating China’s 46% market share of the global dry bulk fleet.
By contrast, quantifying the same via Chinese-affiliated operators (Annex I) is more complex. The structures of vessel ownership, operators, and managers are sometimes opaque and fragmented.
The blow falls by degrees
Although softened from its original form, the US port fee is distortive by nature. It is meant to nudge US importers from Chinese shipbuilders.
However, the US cannot yet step competitively into the world of commercial shipbuilding. Shifting from major shipbuilders is more aspirational than practical for now.
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