Baltimore shipping channel fully reopens after more than 2 months

The Port of Baltimore’s shipping channel, in its entirety, opened for business as of Monday evening.

The navigable waterway had been at least partially blocked since March 26, when the 984-foot container ship Dali lost power and crashed into one of the Francis Scott Key Bridge’s support piers, knocking it over and killing six men who were filling potholes on the span. The ship itself was lodged in the channel for nearly two months, in addition to 50,000 tons of debris from the bridge that had carried Interstate 695 over the Patapsco River since 1977.

“We’ve cleared the Fort McHenry Federal Channel for safe transit,” said Col. Estee Pinchasin, Baltimore district commander of the Army Corps of Engineers, in a statement about 6:30 p.m. Monday. “USACE will maintain this critical waterway as we have for the last 107 years.”

The reopening was forecast for sometime Monday, but it remained uncertain for most of the day whether crews would meet that deadline. In the early afternoon, Army Corps spokeswoman Cynthia Mitchell said the agency was awaiting final results from underwater surveys of wreckage on the riverbed that could get in the way of vessel traffic.

Crews planned over the weekend to sweep the area with sonar, LIDAR and a magnetometer to “investigate any high spots, ensuring there’s no hazard to navigation,” Pinchasin said in an earlier statement.

Now, 11 weeks after the disaster, the 50-feet deep, 700-foot wide channel is fully open.

“Although the overarching goal to restore full operational capacity to the Federal Channel was successful, each day, we thought of those who lost their lives, their families, and the workers impacted by this tragic event,” Pinchasin said Monday evening. “Not a day went by that we didn’t think about all of them, and that kept us going.”

One day after the bridge collapse, authorities cited opening the channel to shipping commerce as a priority. The Port of Baltimore has handled more automobiles than any U.S. port for 13 consecutive years, including more than 800,000 vehicles in 2023 alone. It is one of only seven U.S. ports to rank in the top 25 nationally for total tonnage, dry bulk tonnage and container volume received.

The shipping channel’s partial closure was a blow to local, as well as global, commerce. Last year, in April, the port’s public terminals handled 1 million tons of general cargo. This April, it handled a fraction of that, just 1,822 tons. But since then, more and more ships have been able to call on Baltimore, and May’s numbers, not yet released, should show a substantial increase from the previous month.

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