{"id":21863,"date":"2016-04-15T09:08:17","date_gmt":"2016-04-15T13:08:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/?p=7033"},"modified":"2024-05-21T15:54:14","modified_gmt":"2024-05-21T19:54:14","slug":"the-faces-behind-our-maritime-industry","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/the-faces-behind-our-maritime-industry\/","title":{"rendered":"The Faces Behind our Maritime Industry"},"content":{"rendered":"
Posted April 15, 2016<\/em><\/p>\n When the containership Benjamin Franklin<\/em> visited the U.S. West Coast<\/a> earlier this year, it drew attention during stops at the ports of Long Beach and Oakland in California, and in Seattle.<\/p>\n Longer than 3.6 football fields, the Benjamin Franklin<\/em> is the largest containership to ever call on the United States. It can carry up to 18,000 containers, known as 20-foot equivalent units, or TEUs.<\/p>\n These containers transport everything from the clothes you\u2019re wearing, to the banana you had for breakfast this morning, and the computer that you are using now. A single 20-foot container can hold 48,000 bananas, and if that were the Benjamin Franklin<\/em>\u2019s sole cargo, it could carry up to 864 million bananas!<\/p>\n The number of people it takes to operate this behemoth across the seas and into our ports to deliver two bananas for every person in the country? Only 26.<\/p>\n As the 2016 Sea Grant Knauss Fellow<\/a> with the U.S. Committee on the Marine Transportation System<\/a>, or CMTS, I\u2019ve had the amazing opportunity to meet some of the people who make the nation\u2019s marine transportation system run smoothly and efficiently.<\/p>\n The CMTS is a partnership of federal departments and agencies that have oversight of or interest in the marine transportation system \u2014\u00a0including vessels, navigable waterways, ports and landside connections (such as railroads and trucks) that help move people and goods to, from and on the water.<\/p>\n