Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of ports of the United States, ranked by tonnage. [1] Ports in the United States handle a wide variety of goods that are critical to the global economy, including petroleum, grain, steel, automobiles, and containerized goods. See the articles on individual ports for more information, including history, geography, and statistics.
The ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles together account for approximately 40% of the shipping containers entering the United States. [7] More than three-quarters of the containers leaving Los Angeles were empty in July 2021 whereas about two-thirds of the containers leaving U.S. ports are typically filled with exports.
This page was last edited on 24 December 2023, at 10:12 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
United States, California: San Francisco Bay, Sacramento River: Nome: North America: United States, Alaska: Bering Sea: Port of Pichilingue/La Paz: North America: Mexico, Baja California Sur: Gulf of California: UNESCO Whale Sanctuary and Bio-Reserve Port of Bellingham: North America: United States, Washington: Strait of Georgia, Bellingham Bay
This is a list of ports and harbours of the Atlantic Ocean, excluding the ports of the Baltic Sea. For inland ports on rivers, canals, and lakes, including the Great Lakes , Saint Lawrence Seaway , and Mississippi River , see inland port .
Ports and harbors of the West Coast of the United States (4 C) Pages in category "Ports and harbors of the United States" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total.
The following lists of ports cover ports of various types, maritime facilities with one or more wharves where ships may dock to load and discharge passengers and cargo. Most are on the sea coast or an estuary, but some are many miles inland, with access to the sea via river or canal.
This article lists the world's busiest container ports (ports with container terminals that specialize in handling goods transported in intermodal shipping containers), by total number of twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) transported through the port. The table lists volume in thousands of TEU per year.