Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

newsworthy

Port of Los Angeles forges cooperation agreement with Indonesia

Partners will share data, plan infrastructure development in pushback against uncertainty of tariff changes and USMCA treaty.

The Port of Los Angeles said yesterday it has launched a partnership with Indonesia to collaborate on data sharing and infrastructure development, forging its own path with an international freight initiative in an era when government trade wars have kept many cargo ports guessing about changes to trading partners and cargo flow.

Officials from the Port of Los Angeles and Indonesia Port Corp. (IPC) signed the memorandum of understanding (MOU) with goals to promote cooperation on issues of business and trade, digital supply chain efficiency, the environment, and infrastructure development. Those moves could be significant because Indonesia is the largest economy in Southeast Asia and the 16th largest economy in the world, the port said.


The move comes as the Trump Administration has issued a succession of fast-changing tariffs in recent months that have changed traditional patterns of global imports and exports. Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka has been a vocal critic of those tariffs, saying they threaten nearly 1.5 million U.S. jobs and more than $186 billion of economic activity nationwide.

Additional changes are in the works as the Administration works to replace the 1994-era North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with a new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).

Under the new deal with Indonesia, the Port of Los Angeles will collaborate with Indonesia's state-owned port system—known formally as PT Pelabuhan Indonesia II (Persero)—on strategies related to port operations, commercial trade competitiveness, and port and rail infrastructure development. In addition, the partners will share best practices on pollution reduction, alternative energy initiatives, and port security and safety programs.

Finally, they will also cooperate on digital supply chain efficiency, following the Port of Los Angeles' lead on using the "Port Optimizer" platform, a digital portal co-developed with GE Transportation to track real-time maritime shipping data for cargo owners and supply chain stakeholders.

"Increased global competitiveness, supply chain innovation and the more widespread use of sustainable operations technology can only happen if ports join forces in earnest to share ideas and expertise," Seroka said in a release. "This agreement today is another example of the Port of Los Angeles' commitment to further promote international cooperation and collaboration across the globe."

The deal with Indonesia follows other recent contracts between individual ports and foreign countries, including the Port of Los Angeles signing a five-year MOU last month with Denmark's Copenhagen Malmö Port AB (CMP) to collaborate on sustainability and environmental issues.

Other initiatives include a deal in November between a consortium of Florida seaports and Mexico to enhance international trade, and the announcement in June that Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International would collaborate with Amsterdam's Airport Schiphol to support cargo trade and investment between metro Atlanta and the Netherlands.

The Latest

kion linde tugger truck
Lift Trucks, Personnel & Burden Carriers

Kion Group plans layoffs in cost-cutting plan

More Stories

photos of us capital dome and a container ship at dock

Supply chain groups push back on Trump tariff plan

Industry groups across the spectrum of supply chain operations today are pushing back against the Trump Administration plan to apply steep tariffs on imports from Canada, Mexico, and China, saying the additional fees are taxes that will undermine their profit margins, slow their economic investments, and raise prices for consumers.

Even as a last-minute deal today appeared to delay the tariff on Mexico, that deal is set to last only one month, and tariffs on the other two countries are still set to go into effect at midnight tonight.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

containers stacked in yard

U.S. manufacturers scramble to avoid pain of tariff war

Businesses are scrambling today to insulate their supply chains from the impacts of a trade war being launched by the Trump Administration, which is planning to erect high tariff walls on Tuesday against goods imported from Canada, Mexico, and China.

Tariffs are import taxes paid by American companies and collected by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Agency as goods produced in certain countries cross borders into the U.S.

Keep ReadingShow less
containers stacked on a ship in harbor

Average container transit time in Q4 climbed from 60 days to 68 days

Businesses dependent on ocean freight are facing shipping delays due to volatile conditions, as the global average trip for ocean shipments climbed to 68 days in the fourth quarter compared to 60 days for that same quarter a year ago, counting time elapsed from initial booking to clearing the gate at the final port, according to E2open.

Those extended transit times and booking delays are the ripple effects of ongoing turmoil at key ports that is being caused by geopolitical tensions, labor shortages, and port congestion, Dallas-based E2open said in its quarterly “Ocean Shipping Index” report.

Keep ReadingShow less
drawing of warehouse AMR bot with IOT data

North American manufacturers embrace “factory of the future”

Manufacturing enterprises in North America are breaking with tradition to harness the power of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) as they seek to compete amid new technologies, consumer demands, and economic shifts, according to a report from the research and advisory firm Information Services Group (ISG).

That changing landscape is forcing companies to adapt or replace their traditional approaches to product design and production. Specifically, many are changing the way they run factories by optimizing supply chains, increasing sustainability, and integrating after-sales services into their business models.

Keep ReadingShow less
chart of women's portion of transport and storage jobs

Women hold only 12% of transportation and storage jobs worldwide

Women are significantly underrepresented in the global transport sector workforce, comprising only 12% of transportation and storage workers worldwide as they face hurdles such as unfavorable workplace policies and significant gender gaps in operational, technical and leadership roles, a study from the World Bank Group shows.

This underrepresentation limits diverse perspectives in service design and decision-making, negatively affects businesses and undermines economic growth, according to the report, “Addressing Barriers to Women’s Participation in Transport.” The paper—which covers global trends and provides in-depth analysis of the women’s role in the transport sector in Europe and Central Asia (ECA) and Middle East and North Africa (MENA)—was prepared jointly by the World Bank Group, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ), the European Investment Bank (EIB), and the International Transport Forum (ITF).

Keep ReadingShow less