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An Ocean Blueprint for the 21st Century - California Ocean ...

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CHAPTER 13SUPPORTING MARINE COMMERCEAND TRANSPORTATIONMarine commerce and transportation are vital to <strong>the</strong> nation’s economy and security.The waterborne movement of cargo and passengers requires an efficientmarine transportation system that is smoothly connected to <strong>the</strong> nation’s inlandhighway and rail infrastructure to meet current and future demands. In addition,improving <strong>the</strong> nation’s marine transportation system depends on improvedinteragency coordination, including between marine transportation ando<strong>the</strong>r important ocean and coastal activities, enhanced emergencypreparedness and security at <strong>the</strong> nation’s ports, and improved strategicplanning to ensure that increased levels of marine commerce aremanaged in <strong>the</strong> most effective, safe, secure, and environmentallyresponsible manner possible.Connecting People, Places, and ProductsThe U.S. marine transportation system is <strong>the</strong> nation’s link toglobal commerce and an essential and growing componentof <strong>the</strong> national economy. The movement of manufacturing jobsfrom <strong>the</strong> United States to overseas, <strong>the</strong> nation’s dependence on rawmaterials from o<strong>the</strong>r countries, global competition to provide highqualitygoods at competitive prices, and consumer demand havecombined to increase <strong>the</strong> nation’s dependence on <strong>the</strong> import of <strong>for</strong>eignmaterials and goods. At <strong>the</strong> same time, increasing affluence in <strong>for</strong>eignnations, coupled with worldwide population growth, has stimulated internationaldemand <strong>for</strong> U.S. agricultural and manufactured products.Value of <strong>the</strong> Marine Transportation SystemThe world’s oceans and inland waterways are <strong>the</strong> highways of choice <strong>for</strong> <strong>the</strong> globalmovement of this vast international trade. As <strong>the</strong> world’s largest trading nation, <strong>the</strong> UnitedStates imports and exports more merchandise than any o<strong>the</strong>r country (Table 13.1) and hasone of <strong>the</strong> most extensive marine transportation systems in <strong>the</strong> world. 1 U.S. marineimport-export trade accounts <strong>for</strong> nearly 7 percent of <strong>the</strong> nation’s gross domestic product. 2Domestically, coastal and inland marine trade amounts to roughly one billion tons ofcargo, worth more than $220 billion a year. 3The U.S. marine transportation system is a complex public–private partnership withmany participants. It consists of state, territorial, local, and privately owned facilitiesmanaged, financed, and operated by federal, state, territorial, and local governments.192 A N O CEAN B LUEPRINT FOR THE 21ST C ENTURY

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