At the Brunswick State of the Port event, Georgia Ports President and CEO Griff Lynch said Colonel’s Island Terminal has become the nation’s busiest port for autos and heavy equipment, handling more than 2 million tons of Roll-on/Roll-off cargo in 2024.
Brunswick also took the top spot in the nation for RoRo exports last year, at 600,000 tons, according to USATradeonline.
In terms of individual RoRo units, Brunswick achieved a record year, handling 901,912 units of autos and heavy equipment in 2024. Autos are up 13.3% and heavy equipment is up 160% due to the GPA investment in specialized storage space and processing capacity.
GPA completed $262 million in improvements at the Port of Brunswick in 2024, adding new warehousing and processing space, as well as 122 acres of RoRo cargo storage. Construction has started on a new railyard on Colonel’s Island, while a fourth berth for RoRo vessels is in the engineering phase…
…New infrastructure and strengthened partnerships are paving the way for continued growth in Roll-on/Roll-off capacity and trade at Georgia Ports…
…A new railyard on the south side of Colonel’s Island Terminal will increase the port’s capacity to export vehicles arriving by rail. Improvements to the existing Myd Harris Yard will bring rail switching onto the terminal in a benefit to the neighboring community…
…Added capacity will extend Brunswick’s service area, because moving cargo from farther-to-reach inland factories to the Georgia coast is more cost effective by rail than truck.
Phase I of the new railyard will increase the port’s annual rail capacity from approximately 150,000 autos to more than 340,000 by mid-2025. Phase II will bring annual rail capacity to 590,000 units, greater than three times the current capacity...
…Separately, construction on a fourth Ro/Ro berth is in the planning stages and expected to start in Summer 2025. The new berth should be complete in 2027 and will more efficiently accommodate vessels carrying 10,800+ car equivalent units (CEU)…
…Market forces favor the continued expansion of Brunswick trade.
Two major factors include the rise of manufacturing and a growing population in the U.S. Southeast. These combined factors will drive more exports and imports to the port. Auto exports are on the increase, growing by 9 percent in 2024 and auto imports are also on the rise at Colonel’s Island, up by 20 percent last year compared to 2023.
Another important factor favoring trade through Colonel’s Island: Bigger ships are on the way.
The Port of Brunswick anticipates handling larger vessels, carrying a greater number of autos and heavy equipment. The typical Ro/Ro vessel today has a range of 4,000 to 8,000 CEUs. Lynch said RoRo carriers are expected to bring 10,800 CEU vessels to Brunswick in the next two to three years…
…Federal projects will also upgrade the shipping channel in Brunswick. Channel improvements will help ensure Brunswick is ready to handle the larger vessels headed its way.
The state legislature have allocated just over $6 million for special harbor improvements at the Port of Brunswick. This allocation will go to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as Georgia’s share of the project costs. The Corps’ plan includes a bend widener and expansion of the turning basin. An expanded vessel meeting area at St. Simons Sound will improve safety for vessels passing each other in two-way traffic.
Congress has approved nearly $38 million for Brunswick, including the $11.35 million federal share of the harbor improvements project. Another $26.6 million is designated for dredging the federal waterway to its full authorized depth of 36 feet in the inner harbor, 38 feet in the outer harbor…
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Source: Extracts from Georgia Ports news release dated 12 February 2025