Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Deep Drafts, Rivers, Bridges and Dollar Stores
When I saw the video of the giant 3 football long container ship crashing into
the Francis Scott Key Bridge, the first thing I thought about was
deep draft container ships and the issues we have had on the Columbia
River here on the other side of the U.S.
I took a community college economics
course in 1998, at Clatsop CC in Astoria, OR where the mighty Columbia River
meets the immense Pacific Ocean. The teacher required that we report upon a
local economic issue, with careful research on both sides of public opinion. I
chose the proposed deepening of the Columbia River shipping channel by the Army
Corps of Engineers -ACE. I had friends working with Columbia River Keeper, so I
began with a sense of the importance of the issue.
The shipping channel through
the Columbia must be dredged on a regular basis by the ACE to keep it navigable
for large container ships. The issue was, should they authorize a massively
increased amount of dredging in order to accomodate the new generation of large
container ships, with drafts 3 times the depth of the current ones?
Can you see
how this relates to the recent disaster in Baltimore? The inner harbor there has
facilities for those massive container ships. They must make certain people very
rich, and offer lots of goods made in other countries cheaply, also cheap to
move.
This is where the dollar stores come to mind. Do you ever wonder, "How is
it possible to make these items and ship them for 1.25? The answer to cheap
things almost always involves hidden costs elsewhere. It is worth the time to
research the back story of what we buy. In this case I make the connection
between cheap goods and disrupted salmon runs, impacted harbors, costly
accidents and general waste. Not buying extraneous stuff is a statement we can
make. It's worth pondering.
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