Cool Port Oakland is expected to open in the third quarter of 2018.
Rendering of the future Cool Port Oakland complex
Source/Port of Oakland
The Port of Virginia® is the latest participant in a U.S. Department of Agriculture program designed to facilitate the import of South American fruit via U.S. East Coast ports.
The Southeast In-Transit Cold Treatment Pilot program allows entry of in-transit, cold-treated containers of blueberries, citrus, and grapes from Peru, blueberries and grapes from Uruguay, and, apples, blueberries and pears from Argentina.
"This designation is important for logistics and supply chain managers importing agricultural products because it means shorter total transit times from origin to market," said John F. Reinhart, CEO and executive director of the Virginia Port Authority. "This helps to diversify our cargo mix. It opens the door for new cargo and provides an important service for owners and shippers of perishables."
Mr. Reinhart predicts shippers will see lower transportation costs and a longer shelf-life for their products; consumers will see lower prices at the store; and there will be environmental benefits from reduced emissions related transportation.
The USDA Southeast In-transit Cold Treatment Pilot enables a limited number of containerized cargoes to enter the port directly after completing a two-week cold treatment process as a safeguard against fruit flies and other pests, as well as acquiring all the required unloading clearances prior to the shipment’s arrival in port.
Containers that fail cold treatment will be prohibited from entering the port and will not be offloaded from vessels. Instead, failed containers will be allowed transit to a Northeastern port for retreatment or returned to the country of origin.