Waterway Economics: Funding increases for region’s Port of Baltimore and Port of Virginia
Our Greater Washington region must continue to invest in all types of transportation and supply-chain infrastructure to ensure our communities and businesses can thrive and adapt in the coming years.
With that, promising news has been announced concerning the two biggest ports that serve our region. Funding for the Port of Baltimore and Port of Virginia will increase after announcements from the federal and state level of U.S. government were made in recent weeks.
President Joe Biden recently announced at the Port of Baltimore that $147 million in awards for the Maryland Port Administration will support jobs by enabling the purchase and installation of zero-emission port equipment, charging infrastructure, and power improvements. It is part of $3 billion in funding from the Inflation Reduction Act that will go towards ports across the country. This is even furthered by the $580 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to fund 31 port improvement projects in 15 states and one U.S. territory.
As for the Port of Virginia, money from the Commonwealth of Virginia in the amount of $2.4 million for the cities of Norfolk, Newport News, and Portsmouth, all of which are vital communities that support the Port of Virginia and its efforts to serve the region’s commerce and supplies needs. The federal government has also invested $380 million in funding to bolster sustainability efforts that hope to make the port more energy efficient, and this stems from the same money being given to the Port of Baltimore through the Inflation Reduction Act.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. consists of over 360 commercial ports that account for over 95% of cargo containers that come into the country. Additionally, a study from the American Association of Port Authorities, shares that $2.9 trillion in GDP and 21.8 million American jobs stem from our country’s vital port system.
The U.S. economy depends heavily on America’s ports to connect our communities to international trade, facilitating the movement of goods between the country and the global market and generating substantial employment opportunities for workers. This dynamic of impactfulness on the U.S. economy was recently highlighted by the Port of Baltimore worker’s strike that created inflation fears for the region.
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