Customer Logins

Obtain the data you need to make the most informed decisions by accessing our extensive portfolio of information, analytics, and expertise. Sign in to the product or service center of your choice.

Customer Logins

My Logins

All Customer Logins
S&P Global S&P Global Marketplace
Explore S&P Global

  • S&P Global
  • S&P Dow Jones Indices
  • S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • S&P Global Mobility
  • S&P Global Commodity Insights
  • S&P Global Ratings
  • S&P Global Sustainable1
Close
Discover more about S&P Global’s offerings
Investor Relations
  • Investor Relations Overview
  • Investor Presentations
  • Investor Fact Book
  • News Releases
  • Quarterly Earnings
  • SEC Filings & Reports
  • Executive Committee
  • Corporate Governance
  • Merger Information
  • Stock & Dividends
  • Shareholder Services
  • Contact Investor Relations
Languages
  • English
  • 中文
  • 日本語
  • 한국어
  • Português
  • Español
  • ไทย
About
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Email Subscription Center
  • Media Center
  • Glossary
Product Login
S&P Global S&P Global Market Intelligence Market Intelligence
  • Who We Serve
  • Solutions
  • News & Insights
  • Events
  • Product Login
  • Request Follow Up
  •  
    • Academia
    • Commercial Banking
    • Corporations
     
    • Government & Regulatory Agencies
    • Insurance
    • Investment & Global Banking
     
    • Investment Management
    • Private Equity
    • Professional Services
  • WORKFLOW SOLUTIONS
    • Capital Formation
    • Credit & Risk Solutions
    • Data & Distribution
    • Economics & Country Risk
    • Sustainability
    • Financial Technology
     
    • Issuer & IR Solutions
    • Lending Solutions
    • Post-Trade Processing
    • Private Markets
    • Risk, Compliance, & Reporting
    • Supply Chain
    PRODUCTS
    • S&P Capital IQ Pro
    • S&P Global Marketplace
    • China Credit Analytics
    • Climate Credit Analytics
    • Credit Analytics
    • RatingsDirect ®
    • RatingsXpress ®
    • 451 Research
    See More S&P Global Solutions
     
    • Capital Access
    • Corporate Actions
    • KY3P ®
    • EDM
    • PMI™
    • BD Corporate
    • Bond Pricing
    • ChartIQ
  • CONTENT
    • Latest Headlines
    • Special Features
    • Blog
    • Research
    • Videos
    • Infographics
    • Newsletters
    • Client Case Studies
    PODCASTS
    • The Decisive
    • IR in Focus
    • Masters of Risk
    • MediaTalk
    • Next in Tech
    • The Pipeline: M&A and IPO Insights
    • Private Markets 360°
    • Street Talk
    SEE ALL EPISODES
    SECTOR-SPECIFIC INSIGHTS
    • Differentiated Data
    • Banking & Insurance
    • Energy
    • Maritime, Trade, & Supply Chain
    • Metals & Mining
    • Technology, Media, & Telecoms
    • Investment Research
    • Sector Coverage
    • Consulting & Advisory Services
    More ways we can help
    NEWS & RESEARCH TOPICS
    • Credit & Risk
    • Economics & Country Risk
    • Financial Services
    • Generative AI
    • Maritime & Trade
    • M&A
    • Private Markets
    • Sustainability & Climate
    • Technology
    See More
    • All Events
    • In-Person
    • Webinars
    • Webinar Replays
    Featured Events
    Webinar2024 Trends in Data Visualization & Analytics
    • 10/17/2024
    • Live, Online
    • 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM EDT
    In PersonInteract New York 2024
    • 10/15/2024
    • Center415, 415 5th Avenue, New York, NY
    • 10:00 -17:00 CEST
    In PersonDatacenter and Energy Innovation Summit 2024
    • 10/30/2024
    • Convene Hamilton Square, 600 14th St NW, Washington, DC 20005, US
    • 7:30 AM - 5:00 PM ET
  • PLATFORMS
    • S&P Capital IQ Pro
    • S&P Capital IQ
    • S&P Global China Credit Analytics
    • S&P Global Marketplace
    OTHER PRODUCTS
    • Credit Analytics
    • Panjiva
    • Money Market Directories
     
    • Research Online
    • 451 Research
    • RatingsDirect®
    See All Product Logins
BLOG Jul 19, 2023

Longshore labor unrest a new daily fact of life for North American shippers

Contributor Image
Peter Tirschwell

Vice President, Maritime & Trade, S&P Global Market Intelligence

Shippers of goods in and out of ports in the U.S. and Canada have been forced to navigate an unusually volatile longshore labor environment over the past three years that is not guaranteed to settle down despite the recent tentative contract agreement on the U.S. West Coast.

With dockworkers on the Canadian West Coast planning to resume a strike on July 22 after rejecting a tentative agreement, upcoming talks in Montreal and an unsettled picture on the US East Coast, shippers are staring at the prospect of ongoing waterfront labor uncertainty for many months to come.

Part of the dynamic on the waterfront reflects wider transportation labor activism where rail, aviation, trucking and longshore workers have achieved or are seeking to achieve substantial enhancements in pay and work rules. Dockworkers are riding that wave, but also being further assertive in light of the historic windfall in profits for ocean carriers — estimated at over $400 billion in total during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The new waterfront labor dynamic is most clearly seen at present on the Canadian West Coast, where history of labor peace — there had not been a work stoppage since 1999 — was shattered on July 1 when members of the Canadian affiliate of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) went on strike at Vancouver and Prince Rupert for what turned out to be, at least initially, a 13-day work stoppage.

That followed a series of disruptive actions up and down the U.S. West Coast during a 13-month negotiation that only ended, after intervention by acting U.S. Secretary of Labor Julie Su, in a deal announced on June 15 that is still subject to ratification by the rank and file. The importance of longshore labor to the supply chains of beneficial cargo owners (BCOs) was in stark relief during the protracted U.S. West Coast negotiations given how much cargo was diverted to East and Gulf coast ports during the talks. The West Coast's share of containerized imports from Asia in the January-June period dropped from 62% in 2021 to 57% in 2023, according to PIERS, a sister company of the Journal of Commerce within S&P Global.

Leatherman conflict in focus on East Coast

Making the labor outlook especially uncertain for shippers is how it could play out in unfamiliar ways, with new dynamics emerging that were not present in recent years. On the U.S. East Coast, for example, long a bastion of labor stability ever since the last major unrest in the late 1970s, a growing effort by the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) to unionize state-employed dockworkers at a Charleston terminal has led to that terminal being underutilized for over two years and has opened the door to new uncertainties to come.

Sources speaking to the Journal of Commerce point to the emergence of questions as to whether the conflict, now in federal court, will remain limited to the Hugh K. Leatherman Terminal at Charleston or potentially expand beyond the facility given the ILA's ambitions to unionize all dockworkers handling containers at ports on the East and Gulf coasts.

Any widening of the conflict beyond Leatherman would expose clashing interests between, on one side, the collective bargaining agreement negotiated between the ILA and a management group led by ocean carriers, and on the other side an entrenched commitment by the state port authorities of South Carolina, Georgia and North Carolina to maintain their longstanding "hybrid" model that dates back to the early days of containerization. Under this model, the port authorities directly operate their terminals by employing state employees for key tasks such as operating ship-to-shore cranes, while employing ILA-represented workers for other tasks such as maintenance and repair. The port authorities view this model as being core to the growth at their ports over many decades.

The influence of the labor contract over the behavior of carriers was obvious when the ILA in 2021 claimed that the collective bargaining agreement entitled them to nonunionized jobs at the newly opened Leatherman terminal, leading a number of carriers, not wanting to be in breach of the contract, to refuse to relocate services to the new facility as requested by the South Carolina Ports Authority.

Litigation initiated by the state of South Carolina claiming that the union coerced the carriers to avoid Leatherman is still under way, but even the outcome will not necessarily change the reality of how carriers' actions can be influenced by contract terms negotiated between them and the union. Negotiations for a new contract or an extension of the existing agreement are likely to commence this year, whereupon many expect the union will seek to clarify or expand language related to its right to represent dockworkers at state-run facilities.

For shippers looking for ways to de-risk supply chains following the pandemic, waterfront labor will likely remain a concern.



Subscribe now or sign up for a free trial to the Journal of Commerce and gain access to breaking industry news, in-depth analysis, and actionable data for container shipping and international supply chain professionals.

Subscribe to our monthly Insights Newsletter


This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.

Previous Next
Recommended for you

Maritime & Trade: Maritime Solutions
Global Trade Solutions
How can our products help you?

We can optimize your trade data to help your business grow

Learn more

Hire industry-leading consultants by the hour

Get the objective, authoritative analysis you need without delays.
FIND AN EXPERT
Related Posts
VIEW ALL
Blog Oct 14, 2024

Maersk rules out Suez Canal routings for Gemini launch

Blog Oct 14, 2024

Heavy frontloading sets up US-Asia trade for falling rates, imports

Blog Oct 11, 2024

Brief ILA strike alters once-placid labor landscape on East, Gulf coasts

VIEW ALL
{"items" : [ {"name":"share","enabled":true,"desc":"<strong>Share</strong>","mobdesc":"Share","options":[ {"name":"facebook","url":"https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2flongshore-labor-unrest-a-new-daily-fact-of-life-for-north-amer.html","enabled":true},{"name":"twitter","url":"https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2flongshore-labor-unrest-a-new-daily-fact-of-life-for-north-amer.html&text=Longshore+labor+unrest+a+new+daily+fact+of+life+for+North+American+shippers+%7c+S%26P+Global+","enabled":true},{"name":"linkedin","url":"https://www.linkedin.com/sharing/share-offsite/?url=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2flongshore-labor-unrest-a-new-daily-fact-of-life-for-north-amer.html","enabled":true},{"name":"email","url":"?subject=Longshore labor unrest a new daily fact of life for North American shippers | S&P Global &body=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2flongshore-labor-unrest-a-new-daily-fact-of-life-for-north-amer.html","enabled":true},{"name":"whatsapp","url":"https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=Longshore+labor+unrest+a+new+daily+fact+of+life+for+North+American+shippers+%7c+S%26P+Global+ http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2flongshore-labor-unrest-a-new-daily-fact-of-life-for-north-amer.html","enabled":true}]}, {"name":"rtt","enabled":true,"mobdesc":"Top"} ]}
Filter Sort
  • About S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • Quality Program
  • Email Subscription Center
  • Media Center
  • Our Values
  • Investor Relations
  • Contact Customer Care & Sales
  • Careers
  • Our History
  • News Releases
  • Support by Division
  • Corporate Responsibility
  • Ventures
  • Quarterly Earnings
  • Report an Ethics Concern
  • Leadership
  • Press
  • SEC Filings & Reports
  • Office Locations
  • IOSCO ESG Rating & Data Product Statements
  • © 2025 S&P Global
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclosures
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information