MARAD awards $241 million in port grants

Written by Marine Log Staff
MARAD announces new marine highway route designations

The U.S. Department of Transportation reports the award of more than $241 million in discretionary grant funding for 25 projects to improve port facilities in 19 states and one territory through the Maritime Administration’s (MARAD) Port Infrastructure Development Program (PIDP).

The projects awarded grants include coastal seaports, Great Lakes ports, and inland river ports. The Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 PIDP includes priorities related to job creation, climate change, and environmental justice impacts.

“These investments will support the shift to cleaner transportation, which will create more economic activity and good paying jobs,” said the Acting Maritime Administrator Lucinda Lessley. “The Port Infrastructure Development Program is an important part of building back better for our ports, our communities, our economy, and our people.”

Going forward, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law will provide $450 million annually in funding for the PIDP program for fiscal years 2022 through 2026, or a total of $2.25 billion. This is roughly the same amount of federal funding provided to ports under DOT-administered grant programs since the DOT began providing funding to ports in 2009.

Some of the projects to be funded under this round of grants include:

Long Beach, California

  • America’s Green Gateway Phase 1: Pier B Early Rail Enhancements Project (awarded: $52,300,000)

The project includes a new locomotive facility, extension of the east rail yard, and extension of the west rail yard. The project will add a 10,000-foot support track within a critical supply chain corridor, construct a new support facility for 24 locomotives, add three new yard tracks, and extend five existing tracks to increase operational efficiency for port cargo and enhance safety for rail workers.

Houston, Texas

  • Bayport Container Terminal Expansion (awarded: $18,267,600)

The project will fund development of Container Yard 1 South, a 39-acre space at the port’s Bayport Container Terminal. Specifically, the project will improve the efficiency and reliability of the movement of goods by increasing the storage capacity of the Bayport Container Terminal complex to 2.3 million TEUs and reducing equipment turn times by using the additional storage capacity to help capitalize on improvements at a nearby truck gate and construction of a new rail spur. The project will support both export and import cargoes.

Brunswick, Georgia

  • Colonel’s Island Berth #4 (awarded: $14,647,284)

The project will address supply chain challenges by constructing a fourth roll-on/roll-off (Ro-Ro) vessel berth at the Port of Brunswick’s Colonel’s Island Terminal in order to add needed capacity at the second busiest RO/RO cargo port in the U.S. and more efficiently accommodate the larger 7,000-plus-unit vehicle carrier vessels that are becoming the industry standard for RO/RO ships calling at U.S. ports.

Bay St. Louis, Mississippi

  • Port Bienville Rail Storage Yard (awarded: $4,140,000)

This project will construct a new rail storage yard to support the existing operations at the port facility. The project would add 130 additional storage spaces, construct two sets of storage tracks, and a new rail siding. These additional spaces are expected to increase the Hancock County Port and Harbor Commission’s (HCPHC) storage capacity by 25 percent so that it can safely manage the current storage operations and meet the current repressed storage demand – easing supply chain challenges. This efficient placement will give Port Bienville Railroad customers access to their cars in a timely manner and increase the reliability of the HCPHC by decreasing the delays caused by congestion.

Tell City, Indiana

  • Ohio River Pier Project (awarded: $1,600,000)

The project will fund construction of a 40-foot diameter pier for a crane that will be used for direct barge-to-truck unloading of cargo. The pier design will allow the crane to operate regardless of water levels. The project complements other capital development projects at the port, including a road project that will provide trucks carrying cargo from the port direct access to a nearby state highway to help speed up the movement of goods through the supply chain.

Delcambre, Louisiana

  • Port Resiliency Improvements (awarded: $2,000,000)

This project includes a dock restoration project and investments required to establish an industrial fabrication facility at the port. Project components include dock refurbishment, debris removal, port slip improvements, and construction of several new small buildings.

Alpena, Michigan

  • Improving Vessel Access for Sustained Viability (awarded: $3,751,623)

The City of Alpena is partnering with Lafarge Alpena to upgrade and modernize Lafarge Alpena’s port and landside shipping facilities to meet the increasing demand for the plant’s construction products. Project improvements include berth dredging to increase the water depths within the port basin to satisfy larger vessels, stone dock demolition to increase the overall area for vessels to access the site, new mooring dolphins, the addition of a roof for a storage building, demolition of a storage building, and maritime security (MARSEC) upgrades.

Oakland, California

  • Powering the Future Project (awarded: $5,200,000)

The project replaces an existing electrical substation and circuit located within the port facility. Additionally, the project will construct a new on-site fuel cell facility and a solar array with battery storage and establish a direct connection between the port’s substation and the local electric utility’s biomass-fuel generator.

Portsmouth, Virginia

  • Portsmouth Marine Terminal Offshore Wind Development (awarded: $20,000,000)

The project will fund improvements to the Portsmouth Marine Terminal to enable it to serve as a staging area in support of offshore wind projects. The grant will fund construction of wind turbine generator staging area in the uplands adjacent to one of the terminal’s wharves and a second area where monopiles and other project components will be stored.

Tacoma, Washington

  • Off-Dock Container Support Facility (awarded: $15,730,000)

The project will fund construction of an Off-Dock Container Support Facility. The project is part of the port’s capital improvement program to modernize and optimize the use of its container terminals and support facilities. The project improves 24.5 acres of land adjacent to the Husky, West Sitcum, and Washington United terminals and will help improve the movement of goods through the facility.

Paducah, Kentucky

  • Bulk Yard Infrastructure Revitalization and Expansion Project (awarded $3,320,000)

The project funds several related infrastructure improvements at the Paducah-McCracken County Riverport. The improvements modernize the port’s material handling equipment, repair damaged facilities, and upgrade site conditions in the port’s Bulk Yard. Specific work includes: adding a concrete surface to the existing laydown area to create a 30,000-square-foot pad; replacing three cable mast radial stackers; replacing a 90-foot conveyor and reclaim hopper; utility work associated with equipment installations; rebuilding the roofs on two storage domes; replacing a truck scale;

You can see the listing of all awards HERE

Categories: Coastal, Inland, News, Ports & Terminals Tags: