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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Automation of port terminals threatens thousands of lucrative dock worker jobs

    Automation of port terminals threatens thousands of lucrative dock worker jobs

    By Andrew O'Reilly
    Published March 27, 2017 FoxNews.com

    Shipping containers at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California. (REUTERS/Bob Riha, Jr., File)


    The push over the last decade by international maritime ports to fully automate operations has sparked the ire of many U.S. longshoremen whose high-paying jobs and way of life are at stake.

    The trend also sets up a battle between their unions and companies and governments who see automation as a cleaner, more efficient and more cost-friendly alternative to the current system.


    “This may be the most difficult and complex challenge we’ve ever undertaken,’’ Dan Sperling, professor of civil engineering and environmental science at the University of California, Davis and a member of California’s Air Resources Board, told Bloomberg. “We’re trying to change the entire freight system.’’


    California is on the frontlines in the battle over automation as the ports of Long Beach, Los Angeles and Oakland handle 40 percent of U.S. container traffic and that number is expected to increase with the expansion of the Panama Canal.


    Advocates for automation argue that ports run basically by robots can handle the greater volume of goods expected to go through the state’s ports and do it more efficiently and in a tighter space.


    More on this...




    TraPac LLC, which operates a shipping terminal at the Port of Los Angeles, says the company’s fully automated terminal in Southern California has not only doubled the speed of loading and unloading ships – saving TraPac money and boosting its profit margin – but it has also cut down on the time trucks have to wait for containers.

    Adding to this is the electric- and hybrid-powered automated machines cut down on carbon emissions – something that California Gov. Jerry Brown is particularly keen to do.


    Brown wants 100,000 zero-emission freight-hauling machines in California by 2030 and with half the state’s toxic diesel-soot emissions and 45 percent of the nitrogen oxide that plague Los Angeles with the nation’s worst smog coming from commercial shipment, the Democratic governor has honed in on the ports as the place to start working on his goal.


    While this may be music to the ears of environmentalists and shipping industry insiders hoping that the U.S. catches up with the rest of the world (the Port of Rotterdam automated in 1993), it has hit a sour note with the region’s longshoremen, many of whom earn six-figure incomes under the current system.


    “Those robots represent hundreds of (lost) jobs,” Bobby Olvera Jr., president of International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 13, told the Press-Telegram. “It means hundreds of people that aren’t shopping. They aren’t paying taxes and they aren’t buying homes.”


    This sentiment – which is echoed across the country on factory floors and warehouses – is not without precedent.


    When container shipping was first introduced in the U.S. around the middle of the last century, more than 90 percent of workers at urban docks lost their jobs within 15 years of containerization's arrival – a trend that greatly contributed to the decline of the urban middle class in port cities across the globe.


    In a more recent example, at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach the International Longshore and Warehouse Union formally accepted the use of self-driving and automated technologies in 2008. Since then, while none of the unions 14,000 workers have lost their jobs, 10,000 contingent workers have been called up to work much less often, Jim McKenna, president of the Pacific Maritime Association, said.


    The push for full automation has been much stronger on the West Coast than at ports in the East and Gulf Coasts, where operators and unions have come to a tacit agreement on partial automation. While ports in Virginia and New Jersey were the first to try out full automation, major stops like Miami and New York seem less likely to do so anytime soon given the pushback from unions and the fact that large ships rarely unload all of their cargo on a single stop like they do out west.

    Those robots represent hundreds of (lost) jobs... It means hundreds of people that aren’t shopping. They aren’t paying taxes and they aren’t buying homes.
    - Bobby Olvera Jr., president of International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 13

    “We have no problem with semi-automated terminals,” Jim McNamara, a spokesperson for the International Longshoremen’s Association, told Fox News. “New technology is fine if it keeps our workers safe, but full automation means that our jobs are gone.”


    McNamara added: “Not only do our jobs help the economy and keep more people working, but it would also take years and a lot of money to rebuild a port to be fully automated.”


    The high cost, however, is something that terminal owners seem willing to handle if it means bigger profits and to keep pace with global competitors.


    The Port of Los Angeles and TraPac have already invested $693 million in four dozen self-driving cranes and automated carriers, plus related infrastructure. Middle Harbor, the port of Long Beach’s automated terminal, should be up and running in about two years at a cost of $1.3 billion.



    Experts say that these developments mean that the writing is on the wall for longshoremen and that the automation tide is upon U.S. ports whether they are ready or not.

    “The maritime industry has perhaps been slower than most to embrace container terminal automation,” Howard Wren, director of Logistics at Australia’s Jade Software Corp., wrote in article for Port Technology.” “However, confidence in automation technology is now at its highest level ever and the development of automated terminals is quickly approaching the point where the rush is about to begin.”

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/03/27...rker-jobs.html

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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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    It is coming, that's just the nature of progress.

    The very best argument for sending home all illegals,

    limiting legal immigration to those who are needed and will aid to the economy - not live off it, stopping the H1B workers,

    make refugee, true refugees, just that refugees - temporary refugees who will be expected to return home.

    Revamp our education system and education our people to do the jobs that will be needed in the future. Right now, it looks as if we are educating illegal alien children for that.

    Remember when Pres. Clinton was in office, the government talked of paying medical schools to not educate and graduate new doctors? I don't know if it really happened.

    I was in a medium sized city a few months ago. One of it's major industries is healthcare - large hospital, various medical related industry and a VA hospital.

    On all the light poles was a flag 'welcoming our new doctors'. It seems they were welcoming doctors - from all over the world.

    First off, did not anyone see that coming and maybe push for education of doctors?

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    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    It's okay. This is the reality of the future which means no more illegal immigration, massive legal immigration, high taxes on corporations, and bad trade deals. All this has to be fixed. Every single illegal alien has to be deported back where they came from. No more refugees. No more asylum seekers. No more massive legal immigration. In fact, we need a 10 to 20 Year Moratorium on All Immigration. Every cock-eyed trade deal has to be renegotiated or terminated. All this cross oceanic trade must be curbed. The insanity of US shipping products to China so they can make stuff to ship back to US when we can produce all of it and keep our ships in the dock for what we can't produce here.

    Over-population must be curbed. We want Americans to have children, we want a future for our country of American Citizens. That's why we can not tolerate this breeding in our country by people who aren't even supposed to be here. Some illegal alien peasant from Honduras breeds 12 kids in the US? THIS IS INSANITY. STOP IT.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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