According to the company’s release, consistently strong rains will allow the Panama Canal to accommodate 36 transits a day from September, bringing the interoceanic waterway ever closer to maximum operating conditions.
At its maximum, the canal can handle 40 ship transits a day, a figure that was eroded last year as months of record drought took their toll.
In tandem, canal administrators were forced to cut maximum draft limits for ships transiting the waterway’s larger Neopanamax locks by close to 2 meters, something that has eased in recent months as rains have returned. The canal will increase daily transits to 35 slots after August 5.
The Panama Canal Authority has given itself a six-year deadline to complete the construction of a giant $1.6 billion new reservoir along the Indio River. This reservoir will help provide water security in the years ahead so that the vital waterway can maintain a minimum of 36 transits a day.
Source: Port News