A look at the Panama Canal and its newly expanded locks, which were formally inaugurated on Sunday June 26,2016
The Malta flagged cargo ship named Baroque, a post-Panamax vessel,
arrives to the Agua Clara locks on a test of the newly expanded Panama
Canal in Agua Clara, Panama.
The canal
Opened on Aug. 15, 1914, the Panama Canal was constructed by the United
States between 1904 and 1913 at a cost of $375 million, building on an
earlier, French-led effort that fizzled. An estimated 20,000 workers
died during French control of the project, many due to tropical diseases
such as malaria, and 5,600 more perished during U.S. construction. The
canal revolutionized global sea traffic by replacing long voyages around
Cape Horn at the tip of South America.
The operations
The canal was under U.S. control until a 1977 agreement between
Presidents Jimmy Carter and Omar Torrijos paved the way for its transfer
to Panama on Dec. 31, 1999. Canal authorities say it generated $10
billion in direct income for the Panamanian state through 2015. With
related economic activity, the canal is responsible for about 40 percent
of Panama’s GDP. On average, 35 to 40 ships transit the waterway each
day, and the canal is estimated to handle 6 percent of world maritime
commerce.
The new locks
The $5.25 billion project was initially scheduled for completion in
October 2014, roughly coinciding with the canal’s 100th anniversary, but
was delayed by slow approvals for concrete to use in the locks, labor
strikes and leaks detected late last year. The expansion includes two
new sets of lock complexes, one on the Pacific coast on the outskirts of
Panama City and one on the northern coast at Colon.
The new ships
The new locks are 180 feet wide and 1,400 feet long, big enough to
accommodate New Panamax-class vessels that are seen as the future of
global shipping. Those ships can reach 1,200 feet long more than three
football fields and are up to 160 feet wide. They can carry 13,000 to
14,000 cargo containers, about 2 1/2 to 3 times as many as on vessels
that could fit in the previous locks. The International Monetary Fund
estimates the canal expansion will reduce global maritime shipping costs
by $8 billion a year.
The first ship
Originally called the Andronikos, the ship making the inaugural voyage
through the new locks was renamed the COSCO Shipping Panama by its
Chinese owner in honor of Panama and the ceremonial passage. It’s a
Marshall Islands—flagged container vessel with a capacity of 9,472
shipping containers and is 158 feet wide and 984 feet long. It entered
the Atlantic locks Sunday morning for an approximately eight-hour
transit to the Pacific locks
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