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As Trade Shifts, Ports May Never Be the Same

Getting grain business back may be harder than winning it

Cite Georgia Ports Authority

港口在太平洋西北地区投资价值上千万eds of millions of dollars to expand their ability to ship America’s agricultural riches east to Asia, with export capacity and rail unloading for grains and oilseeds more than doubling from 2008 to 2015, according to William W. Wilson, a professor of agribusiness at North Dakota State University.

Bloombergreports that now, amid Trump’s trade war with China and no deal with Japan, port officials are concerned where growth will come from if Asia turns elsewhere for crops and U.S. farmers and exporters seeking diversification and stability ship more supplies through the Gulf Coast to Europe and Middle East.

“It is so hard to get business,’’ Alex Strogen, chief commercial officer for the Port of Vancouver USA toldBloomberg. “What’s even harder is to win back business.’’

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