The shuttle service, which began earlier this year with five barges per week, is a regularly scheduled container-on-barge service for exports moving from the Baton Rouge area to the Port of New Orleans, where the containers are loaded onto container vessels.
The new service fulfills a market need by repositioning empty containers from Memphis to Baton Rouge for an increasing volume of resin exports from the Baton Rouge area. It also provides exporters with more efficient transportation options by water to re-position empty equipment that would otherwise move by truck or rail.
“We are thrilled to have received this grant and to be working with the Port of Greater Baton Rouge and SEACOR AMH to offer container-on-barge service to our customers,” said Gary LaGrange, president and CEO of the Port of New Orleans. “In addition to the economic and operational benefits, the service has a positive environmental impact as well.”
SEACOR AMH, operator and developer of the shuttle service, and Ports America, the terminal operator at the Port of New Orleans and Port of Greater Baton Rouge, were also strategic partners in obtaining the grant, the port officials said.