Published Feb 06, 2023 by A.J. Mistretta
The first phase of a massive effort to expand the Houston Ship Channel is now complete.
The $1 billion expansion project, known as Project 11, is designed to keep Port Houston competitive by reducing congestion and increasing safety for one of the nation’s busiest waterways. Port Houston officials said this week that the first 11-mile segment extending from Bolivar Roads to Redfish—known as Segment 1A—is now finished.
Roger Guenther, Executive Director at Port Houston, said the completion of 1A moves Port Houston one step closer to handling unrestricted two-way traffic of larger vessels. The entire Project 11 is on track for completion in 2025. Port officials say it’s an aggressive timeline that is necessary to accommodate the future needs of businesses and vessels.
Guenther said Project 11 represents a commitment to growing the economy, creating more jobs in the Houston region and ensuring the safety of the roughly 20,000 vessels that move through the Channel annually.
The Houston Ship Channel contributes more than $800 billion to the U.S. economy and is a critical link to transporting goods and commerce with more than 200 countries around the world. In 2021, the Houston’s port was ranked number one for waterborne tonnage. Port Houston is the top container port in the Gulf.
During the Partnership’s State of the Port event in November, officials reported that imports had increased 20% since the beginning of the year and exports close to 15% over the same period. Those increases are coming at a time when other ports around the country have experienced declines in traffic due in part to supply chain bottlenecks.