Posted - May 28, 2013, 9:00 a.m. ET - (Press Release) The Wall Street Journal
CHARLOTTE, N.C., May 28, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- Horizon Lines, Inc.
(OTCQB: HRZL), one of the nation's leading domestic ocean shipping
companies, today announced that it will add a Jacksonville call to its
southbound service between Houston and San Juan, which will continue to
operate on a 14-day roundtrip timetable
The schedule enhancement will offer shippers a Tuesday sailing every
other week from Jacksonville to San Juan. Adding the Jacksonville call
also creates a high-speed, over-the-weekend marine option through
Houston for cargo bound for southeastern destinations along the Eastern
Seaboard. The company's weekly Thursday service departing
Jacksonville for Puerto Rico remains unchanged.
"This is an innovative schedule refinement that utilizes an existing
in-service vessel to add a bi-weekly Tuesday Jacksonville service, as
well as provide both U.S. coastal and deep water ports of call in the
same sailing schedule," said Sam Woodward, President and Chief Executive
Officer. "The result is a customer-focused service enhancement that is
economically attractive, as well as socially and environmentally
responsible."
The first sailing of the new service is scheduled to depart Houston on
Friday, June 7, 2013, arriving in Jacksonville on Tuesday, June 11,
2013. There, certain cargo destined for metropolitan areas in the
Southeast will be transferred via the company's intermodal network and
delivered to final destinations like Miami and Orlando, Florida,
Savannah and Atlanta, Georgia, Charleston, South Carolina and Charlotte,
North Carolina. The vessel will then load additional cargo bound for
San Juan and depart on the same Tuesday, arriving in San Juan on Friday.
It will return directly to Houston from San Juan, departing on Friday
and arriving in Houston on the following Friday, maintaining the
current 14-day roundtrip schedule.
"Horizon's new hybrid service provides two important solutions for
shippers who are moving cargo between Puerto Rico and our Jacksonville
and Houston ports," said Joe Rodriguez, Vice President, Sales and
Marketing. "First, we are responding to their request for a midweek
sailing solution from Jacksonville to Puerto Rico, which hasn't been
available since we discontinued our weekly Tuesday service in January.
Second, we are providing shippers with an attractive marine solution for
delivering cargo between two major regions of the U.S. We have
received strong interest from shippers of building products, raw
materials, resins, agricultural products, foodstuffs and other materials
that flow through Houston to distribution centers and manufacturing
facilities in the Southeast."
The Horizon Producer, a self-propelled, fully cellularized container
ship with cargo capacity of approximately 650 40-ft. containers, will
continue its deployment in the expanded Gulf service. Horizon Lines has
offered direct transit between Houston and San Juan on a 14-day
roundtrip sailing schedule since 2007.
The marine solution for moving cargo from Houston to Jacksonville
offers a high-speed, cost-effective and environmentally responsible
channel for shipping cargo from the Gulf to the South Atlantic markets.
"The over-the-weekend transit has the potential to remove numerous
cargo containers from the nation's major highways between Houston and
Jacksonville, reducing road wear, traffic congestion, potential
accidents, and pollution," said Richard Rodriguez, Vice President and
General Manager, Puerto Rico. "Each container moving from Houston to
Jacksonville on the Horizon Producer eliminates 900 truck miles one way
and 1,800 truck miles on a round-trip basis, which equates to 1 1/2 to
three metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions for each container moved.
Additionally, the new service allows us to offer faster transit times
from Houston to the South Atlantic markets than railroads currently are
capable of providing, and to move the cargo over the weekend, when truck
availability is scarce."
Post to be found at:
http://online.wsj.com/article/PR-CO-20130528-906348.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment