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Updated · gCaptain · May 19Port of Long Beach Cargo Volumes Fall Again in April as Hormuz Crisis Lifts Fuel Costs
2 articles · Updated · gCaptain · May 19
- April cargo volumes at the Port of Long Beach fell from a year earlier, extending the port’s decline as trade flows stayed under pressure.
- The drop was tied to the Hormuz crisis, which has pushed up fuel costs and added fresh uncertainty to already fragile supply chains.
- Global market volatility also weighed on international trade, leaving importers and shippers more cautious about moving goods through the port.
- The latest decline underscores how geopolitical disruption and higher transport costs are still rippling through major U.S. gateways.
Is the Hormuz Crisis masking a deeper weakness in West Coast port competitiveness? How do stricter EU emissions rules affect crisis-driven shipping reroutes and higher fuel use? What does a truly resilient supply chain look like beyond just rerouting ships?