Jacksonville Port Authority - MSC Presentation

Presentation to:
ROY SCHLEICHER
Sr. Director of Marketing & Trade Development
RAUL ALFONSO
Director of Latin America Marketing & Trade Development
May, 2006
JAXPORT OVERVIEW
ƒ The Jacksonville Port Authority (JAXPORT) is a
maritime-focused independent government agency
created by the Florida legislature in 1963.
ƒ Operating as a landlord, JAXPORT manages the
upkeep, improvements and expansion of Port
Authority facilities and coordinates their use by
private companies.
ƒ JAXPORT
operates
three
marine
facilities:
Talleyrand, Blount Island and Dames Point.
ƒ JAXPORT is governed by a seven-member Board of
Directors. The Mayor of Jacksonville appoints four
members and the Florida Governor appoints three
members
JAXPORT’s Facilities
JAXPORT’s Facilities
Blount Island Marine Terminal
ƒ 9 miles from the Atlantic.
ƒ Container, Breakbulk, RoRo
& General Cargo.
ƒ 867 acres paved, lit and
secured.
ƒ Eight container cranes (three
50-ton, three 45-ton and two
40-ton) & one 100-ton whirly
crane.
ƒ On-dock rail connection:
CSX.
ƒ A 90,000 square foot CFS.
ƒ A 275,000 square foot on
dock transit warehouse
Talleyrand Marine Terminal
ƒ 21 miles from the Atlantic.
ƒ Container, RoRo, Liquid Bulk and
General Cargo.
ƒ 173 acres paved, lit and secured.
ƒ 6 container cranes, two rubber
tired gantry cranes, one 100-ton
whirly crane, tanker discharge
facilities & three 40-ton container
stackers.
ƒ On-dock rail connections: CSX,
NS & FEC.
ƒ A 120,000 square foot refrigerated
warehouse and 40,000 square foot
dry
ƒ A 553,000 square foot warehouse
available Nov. 2005
Dames Point Marine Terminal
(TraPac Jacksonville Terminal Under Development)
ƒ 11 miles from the
Atlantic.
ƒ Currently a cruise and
bulk terminal.
ƒ Future plans include
the development of
TraPac 158-acre
container terminal for
MOL
ƒ 80-acres available for
additional
development.
Cruise Terminal
MOL Terminal
(rendition)
TraPac Jacksonville Terminal
ƒ August 3, 2005 - groundbreaking for the TraPac
Jacksonville Terminal
ƒ Operational late 2007 - 160 Acres
ƒ “Hub” operation for the Company’s East Coast port
activities
ƒ State-of-the-art post-panamax container handling
systems
ƒ Projected vessel calls between JAXPORT and ports
in Asia, Latin America, and Europe
FOREIGN TRADE ZONE #64
SERVING JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA & THE SURROUNDING AREA
ƒ Payment of duty is deferred until goods enter the U.S. for consumption
- means better cash flow.
ƒ No duty due on re-exported goods means no drawback application.
ƒ Better quota management.
ƒ Choose preferential duty rate in manufacturing - inverted tariff
structure.
Current FTZ #64 Users and Operators
User Operators include:
&
.
General Purpose Operators: SSA/Cooper, J.F. Moran &
Outsource Logistics.
Sub-zone Operators: Atlantic Marine.
JAXPORT’s Tonnage
FY 2005 – 8,448,654 MT
806,951
4,167,382
1,085,616
2,388,706
Containers
Breakbulk
Autos
Bulk
Strategic Manufacturing Location
ƒ Western most port on the
U.S. East Coast
Cleveland
Chicago
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
ƒ Truck transit time:
Pittsburgh
Nashville
8 Hours - 45 millions consumers
24 Hours - 60% of U.S. Population
Montgomery
10
ƒ Over 100 Truck Terminals
New Orleans
Washington, D.C.
Richmond
Charlotte
Atlanta
ƒ Low Back Haul Rates
New York
95
Columbia
75
Jacksonville
Orlando
Miami
Access to Central Florida Market
Jacksonville
1.3 Million
2 Hours Drive
3 Hours Drive
Population Growth Projection
in Central & North Florida Region
of 25% in 15 years.
Tampa
Orlando
Central Florida
3.8 Million
Miami
Intermodal Transportation System
95
75
Jacksonville
10
Three Major Interstate Highways:
I-10, I-75, and I-95
Three Major Rail Lines:
CSX, Norfolk Southern, and FEC
The Top 10 Logistics-friendly Cities
Based on rankings of rail, seaports and air-cargo access
1.
New York
2.
Houston
3.
Chicago
4.
Cleveland
5.
Detroit
6.
St. Louis
7.
Minneapolis-St Paul
8.
San Francisco-Oakland
9.
Kansas City, MO
Others of Interest
13. Baltimore
14. Los Angeles
16. Miami
17. VA Beach/Norfolk/ Newport News
25. Savannah
46. Charleston
10. Jacksonville
Source: Based on annual study and materials developed by Expansion Management and Logistics Today magazines.
Comprehensive list printed in October 25, 2005 issue of Florida Shipper Magazine – www..floridashipper.com
Meet Your Neighbors:
The First Coast’s Protected
Location
Storm
Diverted
„ Storm Protection from
Gulf Stream and
Recurvature Effect
„ Statistically the
LEAST Likely Place
for a Hurricane on the
East or Gulf Coasts
Jacksonville
High
Pressure
„ Only One Hurricane in
Recorded History
Storm
Path
Jacksonville
Unique Amenities
World
World Golf
Golf Hall
Hall of
of Fame
Fame
Jacksonville
Jacksonville Jaguars
Jaguars
PGA
PGA Tour
Tour Headquarters
Headquarters
Jacksonville
Jacksonville Suns
Suns
Jax Facts
ƒ
Consolidated Government
ƒ
Largest City in Land Mass in U.S.
ƒ
Average Winter High of 64.2˚F (17.8˚C)
Average Summer High of 90.8˚F (32.6˚C)*
ƒ
Average Commute Time of 25.2 minutes*
*Source: Bureau of Economic and Business Research 2004
**Source: US Census 2000
Jacksonville/Northeast
Labor Force
ƒ Median Age = 36.8
(Florida Median Age = 39.5, U.S.=36.2)
ƒ Total Labor Force = 700,000
ƒ 3,000 Naval Personnel Separations
Each Year
ƒ Bilingual/Multicultural Workforce
Labor Force
Productivity
ƒ Strong Work Ethic
ƒ Low Absenteeism and Turnover
ƒ Flexible Work Culture
ƒ Florida is a Right-to-Work State
by Constitution
ƒ Jacksonville Unionization is
3.3% in Private Sector
Construction Cost
Comparison
National Average = 100
131.9
111.7
81.1
89.4
106.8
84.4
Atlanta Chicago
Chicago Dallas
Dallas
Jacksonville Atlanta
86.9
85.9
Los
Los Angeles
Angeles Nashville
Nashville New
New York
York Orlando
Orlando
Source: Means Building Construction Cost Data 2006
Cost of Living
National Average = 100
St. Cloud
101.4
Portland
112.7
San Francisco
174.8
Las Vegas
114.8
Washington, D.C.
Denver
Kansas City
95.5
Raleigh
Nashville 94.0
99.6
Phoenix
99.0
96.8
Dallas
93.3
Austin
97.0
Source: ACCRA Cost of Living Study,
2nd
Quarter 2005
145.9
Atlanta
97.7
Richmond
108.4
Charleston
97.7
Jacksonville 92.7
Tampa
97.2
Miami
115.4
Utilities
Among the Lowest Rates in the U.S.
ƒ Outstanding Reliability & Capacity
ƒ Crossroads of Southeast U.S. Electric Grid
ƒ
Telecommunications
The Leading Edge
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
100% Fiber Optic Coverage
Redundant/Self-healing
Total Electronic Switch Network
POPs System
Dual Feed System to Business Sites
Regional Power
Companies:
JEA
FL Power & Light
Seminole Electric
Clay Electric
Destination: JACKSONVILLE
9 Quick Ocean Access to Port.
9 Excellent Port Terminal Facilities.
9 Strategic Location at the Center of the Growing
Southeast Consumer Market.
9 Excellent Rail Services to the Midwest US Market.
9 Excellent Highway Connections to All Markets.
9 Expansion Capabilities – Port & Industrial Areas.