Four Winners Selected From 1,500 Students Vying To Name Port Cranes

After more than 1,500 suggestions from 65 schools and months of anticipation, the South Carolina State Ports Authority and the South Carolina Aquarium announced the winners of their "Name the Crane" contest on Wednesday, June 27.

The cranes on the dock at Columbus Street Terminal have become quite a hit with visitors to the Aquarium, which offers close-up views of port operations.

With the help of the Ports Authority Maintenance Department, the winners climbed ladders and peeled off stickers unveiling their winning names. The names will remain on the base of the port’s most expensive hardware. The massive cranes, which are used to lift shipping containers on and off of vessels, cost $6 million each.

The lucky winners were children who participated in the Aquarium’s 2000-2001 Structured School Program. Students were asked to observe the cranes and see how they look and work. Each student earned $25 and tickets to the Aquarium, while each school received $100 for their science programs.

Winning Entries:

Charleston's Wine & Spirits Trade Up 12%

Charleston moves more than 100,000 tons of wine and spirits annually between the U.S. and 58 countries around the world. The breadth and depth of volume in the trade reflects Charleston's diverse steamship service profile, which features each of the world's ten largest container carriers.

In the first four months of this year, Charleston handled 2,800 TEUs (20-foot equivalent units) loaded with wine and spirits, compared to 2,500 TEUs last year. While imports remained constant between January and April, rising only 3%, exports jumped 42% as a result of outbound whiskey increases to the U.K., Germany, France and Belgium.

The wine and spirits trade is an import-dominated trade in Charleston, with nearly a third of all volume being imported still wines from Italy, Chile and France. Other top inbound cargoes are whiskey, gin, vodka and cordials. Over the past three years, Charleston has seen imported wine and spirits decline slightly from its high in 1998. Meanwhile, exports have increased substantially on stronger whiskey shipments.

In a recent 12-month period, U.S. whiskeys and bourbons were shipped to more than 40 countries around the world from Charleston. Reflecting this global reach, the Kentucky Distillers' Association has a foreign language web site and lists upcoming international trade shows.

CHARLESTON'S TOP WINE & SPIRITS IMPORTS
Still Wines - Italy
Still Wines - Chile
Whiskey & Rum - U.K.
Still Wines - France
Vodka - Sweden

TOP WHISKEY MARKETS THROUGH CHARLESTON
U.K.
Germany
Belgium
France
Spain

Massive Keel Arrives In Port Today

The three large pieces are for the SPIRIT OF SOUTH CAROLINA, a working tall ship that will be constructed adjacent to the Charleston Maritime Center.

The South Carolina State Ports Authority, Inchcape Shipping Services and Stevedoring Services of America are all donating time and equipment to make the lift. The AVONTUUR will then shift to the Maritime Center to unload other materials.

Over the coming two years, the South Carolina Maritime Heritage Foundation will construct a traditionally built 'big timber' pilot schooner, the SPIRIT OF SOUTH CAROLINA, at a site open to the public. It will be similar to a ship built by the Pregnall & Co. shipyard on Charleston Harbor in the 1850s.

A keel-laying ceremony next month will start the construction. Traditional indigenous woods of coastal South Carolina will be used, including recycled live oak, white oak, and long leaf yellow pine.

The Maritime Heritage Foundation will use the vessel to work with South Carolina schools, colleges, municipalities and community groups to develop a variety of sail training and academic programs, as well as important programs for the disadvantaged.

For more information on today's lift, call Byron Miller (SCSPA) at 843/577-8197 or Gary Santos (Inchcape) at 843/ 971-1124. For project information, see the SCMHF's web site at www.scmaritime.org.

Nordana Expands North Africa Service

Nordana uses five vessels calling every two
weeks at Charleston, Houston and Baltimore. Nordana’s vessels are
designed to accommodate project cargoes with odd or oversize pieces, so
the service can handle increased U.S. exports to the Algerian oil and
gas industry.

Monthly News Brief May 2001

Warehouses 106 and 107 on the wharf at Columbus Street Terminal will be demolished, allowing the extension of container crane rails around a bend in the dock alongside berth three. Removing the 243,000 square feet of warehouse space will provide additional container berth capacity. A 1958-vintage breakbulk gantry crane will also be removed. Ontario Specialty Contracting was awarded the project, which should be completed in four months, at a cost of $340,048.

Salmons Dredging will replace the fenders that protect 2,840 feet of concrete wharf at Columbus Street Terminal over a nine-month period at a cost of $1.57 million. The existing plates and timber fenders will be removed. The new fendering system is similar to the work recently done at the Wando Welch Terminal, where steel H-piles and rubber fender units absorb the berthing forces from the ship. Ten new steel mooring bollards will also be installed.

The latest work is part of the SPA's three-year, $240-million capital plan to upgrade existing terminals before realizing new capacity. Also at Columbus Street, a $5.9 million contract to raise and pave a 34-acre grounded container storage area with rubber-tire gantry runways is well underway. New equipment is also on its way to the terminal -- in April, the Authority ordered two 4-high full container handlers and one 7-high empty handler.

CRANE PRODUCTIVITY UP 16% - In April, the Port of Charleston's port-wide crane production topped 36 container moves per crane per hour, up 16% from 31 per crane per hour in April 2000. Most ports are happy to get this level of productivity on a single vessel, much less over an entire month with more than a hundred vessels of all classes. Bill McLean, vice president of operations for the South Carolina State Ports Authority, said the increase came as a result of the improved skill-level of nearly a dozen new operators hired over the past year, as well as the continued team effort of the entire maritime community. Recently, Maersk-Sealand told The Post and Courier that the Port of Charleston was its most productive U.S. port for vessel operations and second in the world only to Hong Kong.

SPA WINS SUMMIT AWARD - The Ports Authority's print advertising campaign "Pros of Productivity" recently won the prestigious Gold Award at the international Summit Awards competition. The Ports Authority competed with more than 3,000 entries, including large multinational corporations, coming from countries including Australia, Canada, Denmark, Italy, Ireland, Puerto Rico, Ukraine and the United States.

SPA Provides Options for Bridge Funding

Charleston, SC -- The South Carolina State Ports Authority Board
today unanimously approved a resolution supporting construction
of a new Cooper River bridge and suggesting three ways that the
SPA could contribute.

0 One, the Authority could pay the verifiable cost differential
of the additional height and width related to the new bridge,
to the extent these costs are not offset by the lower height over
Town Creek; OR

0 Two, the SPA could do away with its existing bond debt through
a State contribution. The SPA would then pay to the State Infrastructure
Bank and/or the State the amount it currently pays in debt service
on $125 million in outstanding bonds. This payment is currently
about $9 million annually; OR

0 Finally, the Authority could treat the bridge as a Special
Project and tolls from the bridge to be collected to repay the
SPA for its contribution.

Doing away with outstanding bonds and instead making these payments
to the State is the most technical option. It can only be done
provided that the State pays off $125 million in bonds issued
independently by the Ports Authority in 1998.

While other states and cities provide funding to their ports,
the Ports Authority has not received taxpayer support of its capital
plan since the late 1970s and has instead used bonds backed by
its revenues to fund development. The SPA has become the model
of financial responsibility. In fact, the Ports Authority has
received the highest bond rating of any port authority that does
not enjoy a dedicated subsidy.

A master resolution governing these bonds constitutes a legal
pledge between the Authority and its bondholders. The Ports Authority
revenues, therefore, are legally tied to operational expenses,
repaying debt and capital improvements. Because of this legal
agreement between the Ports Authority and its bondholders, the
Authority's existing bond debt must be defeased before the Authority
can legally spend its revenues on a non-port function, such as
the bridge.

The challenge has been finding a way to assist with the bridge
while not violating the law and mortgaging the future of our state's
port.

Earlier this year, a plan was proposed to repay a $215-million
federal loan for construction to begin. It called for annual payments
of $7 million from SCDOT, $3 million from the local community
and $5 million from State Ports Authority, assuming the State
provided funding to cover the SPA's commitment. The State funding
to cover the State Ports Authority's portion has not been included
in the budget and led to the options considered today.

S.C. Exports Linked To In-State Seaports

According to Wachovia World Trade Index reports, which analyze data from the U.S. Department of Commerce and other agencies, more than 37% of all South Carolina exports are shipped from in-state ports.

In Georgia and Virginia, 31% of their state's exports move through in-state ports. North Carolina sends less than 8% of total exports from the in-state Customs district.

"Industry demands a successful, competitive port system," said Bernard S. Groseclose, Jr., president and chief executive officer of the South Carolina State Ports Authority. "We are proud to play such a vital role in moving South Carolina products to world markets."

In the fourth quarter alone, South Carolina exports through the Charleston district were $887 million, an impressive 41.5% increase from the same quarter in 1999.

The South Carolina figure is especially impressive when considering more than one-third of the state's exports go to Canada and Mexico, two of the state's top trading partners. This NAFTA business moves primarily by land across borders in the northeast and southwest, as opposed to by water.

In 2000, South Carolina exports saw double-digit growth in exports to overseas markets in Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Taiwan and France. Exports to the European Union topped Canada.

Lehman Selected for Ex-Im Bank, TRB

Charleston, SC - Peter O. Lehman, director of planning and business
development for the South Carolina State Ports Authority, has
been named to two national organizations.

Lehman will serve on the National Research Council through the
Transportation Research Board's Committee on Ports and Channels.
The National Research Council is a private, nonprofit operating
agency for the National Academy of Sciences. Its members serve
to personally advise the government and the public on issues and
not to represent their organizations.

He was also named to the Advisory Committee of the Export-Import
Bank of the United States. The Ex-Im Bank, which was created by
President Roosevelt, is an independent U.S. government agency
that has provided financing for U.S. exports for more than 65
years. The committee advises the Bank on its programs, especially
with respect to providing competitive financing to expand global
markets for U.S. exports.

Lehman is President of the Propeller Club of the Port of Charleston
and has served as vice chairman of the American Association of
Port Authorities' Planning and Research Committee. He was also
recently named vice chairman for the Industry Consultations Program,
a joint initiative of the U.S. Department of Commerce and the
U.S. Trade Representative, and is a member of S.C. International
Trade Conference Board.

He received his bachelor's degree in business administration
from Stetson University, earned a certificate of advanced study
from the American Graduate School of International Management
(Thunderbird), and obtained his juris doctorate degree from the
New England School of Law. He is a licensed attorney and is a
member of the South Carolina, New Jersey and District of Columbia
Bars as well as 10 Federal Courts including The Supreme Court
of the United States.

Stribling Named Marketing, Sales Director

The South Carolina State Ports Authority (SCSPA) has named Fred N. Stribling as Director of Marketing and Sales.

Stribling was previously with Maersk-Sealand, where he held senior management positions in both sales and operations during his fifteen-year tenure. He will be responsible for the SCSPA's carrier and cargo sales, pricing and marketing functions. Stribling will report to George W. Young, vice president, marketing and sales.

Stribling is an honor graduate from the University of Tampa and has been engaged as both an active duty and reserve officer with the U.S. Army. He presently holds the rank of lieutenant colonel
in the Reserves.

The South Carolina State Ports Authority operates public seaport facilities in Charleston, Georgetown and Port Royal. Charleston currently ranks as the nation's fourth largest container port. Last year cargo valued at $33 billion moved through the Charleston Customs district.

Georgetown Port Dedicated to Jimmy Moore

For nearly four decades Jimmy Moore of Georgetown worked to bring better jobs and economic opportunities to South Carolina - today his efforts were recognized in a ceremony dedicating the Port of Georgetown to him.

"With all of his skills, he used the God-given asset of Winyah Bay to attract jobs for the people of Georgetown," said Edgar A. Buck, chairman of the South Carolina State Ports Authority. "To me he is a wise leader, a mover of projects, a savvy businessman and a gifted reader of the political tea leaves."

Jack Scoville, a Georgetown attorney and currently the South Carolina State Ports Authority's Board secretary, suggested the honor for Mr. Moore as a way of paying tribute to a force for good in Georgetown and across South Carolina. "Jimmy's contributions certainly deserve notice," said Scoville.

In 1961, Mr. Moore accepted an invitation from then governor Fritz Hollings to serve on the State Ports Authority's Board and resigned his post with the State Development Board. Over the next 35 years he would serve as treasurer, vice chairman and chairman.

In a letter to Mr. Moore, Senator Hollings said, "I'm not surprised that the port is being dedicated in his honor. Quite frankly, I'd be surprised if it wasn't. Thousands of Georgetown County residents have him to thank for reliable, good-paying jobs."

Mr. Moore started his legal career in the law office of Herbert Smith, the first Georgetown resident to be named to the Ports Authority Board. The two shared their desire to bring prosperity to Georgetown through the Port.

Over the years, Mr. Moore worked to build port business in Georgetown, through employers such as Georgetown Steel, Hess Oil, International Paper, Akzo Salt and Holnam Cement. He also successfully worked toward $3 million in capital improvements to the Port of Georgetown in the mid-1980s. Since 1989, port business in Georgetown has doubled.

In 2000, 114 ships docked in Georgetown during the year, carrying more than 1.79 million tons of forest products, salt, cement and steel for local industries. This was an increase of more than 18% compared to the previous year, when the port moved 1.52 million?tons. For the year, ship traffic was up 8% from 106 in the previous year, while barge traffic slipped 8% to 260 barges.

In August the Ports Authority Board passed a resolution noting Mr. Moore's dedication to both the state and to the Georgetown port.

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