Georgia Ports Authority (GPA) govt director Griff Lynch says that the GPA’s Network Georgia plan to develop inland rail hubs across the state is gaining momentum, with federal environmental approval for an inland terminal close to Gainesville, Ga.
“Our expanding network is increasing rail capacity and connectivity between the port and major manufacturing sites around the state,” stated Lynch. “Moving more cargo by rail eases interstate traffic and reduces the carbon footprint of the state’s logistics industry by making the most efficient use of the Georgia’s logistics infrastructure.”
GPA just lately acquired NEPA (National Environmental Policy Act) approval for the Northeast Georgia Inland Port within the Gainesville-Hall County space. The authority will now finalize a grant settlement with MARAD which has awarded GPA a grant of as much as $46.8 million to construct a brand new inland container port alongside the I-85/I-985 hall. Earthwork is slated to start in July, with terminal building scheduled to start January 2024 and wrap up by July 2026.
Georgia Ports anticipates the inland rail hub will open with volumes of 60,000 containers per yr. With the roundtrip truck route totaling 602 miles, this opening quantity would alleviate roughly 36 million truck miles on Georgia highways within the terminal’s first yr of operation. GPA estimates 46 of truck visitors between Northeast Georgia and Savannah will use rail as a substitute. Cargo shifting to the area by rail will scale back truck use from seven hours to lower than half-hour. The shift will keep away from 1.6 billion tons of carbon dioxide (CO2e) emissions by 2054, Lynch stated.
“The Northeast Georgia Inland Port will create 20 new direct jobs,” stated Stacy Watson, GPA director of financial and industrial improvement. “However, the rail hub will deliver other opportunities for employment and economic growth as industry is drawn to its logistical benefits. That’s a dynamic we’ve already seen with our Appalachian Regional Port.”
GPA’s first inland rail hub, the ARP is celebrating its fifth yr of operation with sturdy volumes. For the fiscal yr so far by April, the ARP has dealt with 28,552 containers, a rise of 23 % or 5,400 containers in comparison with the identical interval final yr.
Economic impression from the ARP consists of GE Appliances’ $32 million Southern Logistics Center in Murray County, simply two miles from the inland terminal. Additionally, Huali Floors has established its first U.S. headquarters and manufacturing facility in Murray County, a $27 million undertaking. Other developments embrace SK Battery within the Rome-Cartersville space, and the fourth enlargement of Hanwha’s photo voltaic panel manufacturing facility.
In West Central Georgia, the authority has additionally acquired the positioning for one more new inland port in LaGrange. The 200-acre parcel is adjoining to CSX rail and options quick access to Interstates 85 and 185. While the GPA doesn’t but have a improvement schedule for the property, the positioning may ultimately serve the close by auto plant of Kia Motors Manufacturing Georgia, in addition to different importers and exporters within the area.
At the Port of Savannah, building of the Mason Mega Rail Terminal has elevated rail capability to 1 million containers per yr, rerouted Norfolk Southern trains away from neighborhood crossings, and introduced rail switching onto the port.
“It’s been mutually beneficial to the port and our neighbors, by increasing our capability while simultaneously improving quality of life in our surrounding communities,” Lynch stated. “Expansion projects spanning our berths, terminal space and rail infrastructure are delivering the capacity we need to handle our projected growth for decades to come.”
The Georgia Ports Authority recorded its third busiest April ever final month, with 408,686 twenty-foot equal container items of cargo, behind April 2022 (495,782 TEUs) and April 2021 (466,633). The port’s quantity final month constituted a 12 % improve over its pre-pandemic efficiency in April 2019, when Garden City Terminal dealt with 364,481 TEUs.
Georgia’s deepwater ports and inland barge terminals assist greater than 561,000 jobs all through the state yearly, and contribute $33 billion in earnings, $140 billion in income and $3.8 billion in state and native taxes to Georgia’s economic system, says GPA.