Atlantic-Pacific route would allow cross-continental goods deliveries
By Jerome R. Corsi
Canada has announced a plan to extend the NAFTA Superhighway network
north in a way that would finish a continental grid designed to
accommodate an anticipated tsunami of containers from China and the Far
East.
The Canadian Intelligent Super Corridor, or CISCOR, is a national
transportation route designed to reach from the West Coast ports of
Vancouver and Prince Rupert to Montreal and Halifax.
As WND has documented, recent articles published in The Nation and
Newsweek magazines have attempted to characterize the NAFTA
Superhighway as a "conspiracy theory."
Yet, the CISCOR case study provides strong evidence that the
continent's ports, highways and rail lines are being reconfigured into
an inter-modal system emphasizing technological logistics and "inland
smart ports" designed to meet the demands of world trade, largely
driven by the relocation of North American manufacturing to China.
Inter-modal is a transportation economics reference to containers that
can be transported on several different modes of transportation,
including container ships, trucks and trains, without having to be
unloaded or repacked.
According to the CISCOR website, the Saskatchewan-based CISCOR Inland
Port Network of the cities of Regina, Saskatoon and Moose Jaw is
designed to serve "as the central logistics and coordination hub,
creating a Canadian east-west land bridge connecting three major North
American north-south corridors: North America's SuperCorridor, or
NASCO, the Canada-America-Mexico Corridor, or CANAMEX, and the River of
Trade Corridor Coalition."
A multi-color North American continental map on the CISCOR website
leaves no doubt the Canadian super corridor is designed to interface
with the NAFTA Superhighway, extending down into Mexico.
The CISCOR map strongly models the continental map displayed by NASCO
on the trade group's website in 2005.
The CISCOR website confirms an earlier WND report documenting the
Canadian national transportation plan to open Prince Rupert and
Vancouver as deep-water ports capable of handling the new class of
12,500 container-capacity post-Panamax ships now being built for China.
The CISCOR strategy falls under the umbrella of Canadian Prime Minister
Stephen Harper's Asia-Pacific Gateway and Corridor Initiative as
defined by Transport Canada, the Canadian counterpart to the U.S.
Department of Transportation.
WND previously documented how the Canadian National and Canadian
Pacific railroads are included in Canada's Asia-Pacific Gateway and
Corridor Initiative, positioned to operate as NAFTA railroads.
Under the CISCOR plan, the Saskatchewan cities are defined as an
"inland smart port," as are Kansas City, San Antonio and Denver in the
U.S.
The CISCOR website cites the University of Texas Center for
Transportation research to define an inland port as follows: "An Inland
Port is a physical site located away from traditional land, air and
coastal borders with the vision to facilitate and process international
trade through strategic investment in multi-modal transportation assets
and by promoting value-added services as goods move through the supply
chain."
The plan to make the Saskatchewan cities an inland port centers on
utilizing the West Coast deep-water ports in British Columbia as the
input point for millions of containers from China and the Far East.
American companies have taken advantage of cheap labor in China that in
some cases functions at slave or near-slave levels. Communist Chinese
prison camps also continue to make goods for the U.S. market, despite
human rights pressure.
Reconfiguring the transportation infrastructure of North America into
NAFTA Superhighways or Super Corridors drastically reduces the cost of
transporting the containers from China
A quick look at the continental map shows the physical location of the
Saskatchewan cities qualifies them to be an "inland port" because the
area can function as a switching center, with easy access either to
CANAMEX or to what NASCO refers to as the NASCO Corridor, the complex
of Interstate Highways 35, 29 and 94.
Containers can be unloaded by crane in Saskatchewan and placed in giant
warehouses. There they await pick-up by truck or train to be
transported to the next regional warehouse for delivery to the final
destination in North America.
An inland port is considered to be a "smart port" when technology –
such as Radio Frequency Identification, or RFID systems – are utilized
to facilitate customs clearance, security, warehouse distribution,
multi-modal trans-load operations, empty container management and
advanced container logistics tracking.
As WND reported, the Chinese ports management firm, Hutchison Ports
Holdings, is working with Lockheed Martin in a joint venture with NASCO
to place RFID sensors along I-35 to track inter-modal containers from
China that enter North America through the Mexican ports of Lazaro
Cardenas and Manzanillo.
An 87-page business analysis archived on the CISCOR website lays out
the case for developing Saskatchewan as an Inland SmartPort in the
following points that begin the report's Executive Summary:
A majority of the new containerships entering the world fleet in the
next five years will be post-Panamax vessels ready to transport cargo
from China, Southeast Asia and India to North American ports already
strained with capacity.
The Panama Canal is approaching operational capacity and the U.S.
transportation network is struggling to meet the predicted 15 percent
annual rise in Asian container traffic.
In response to the rapid growth in North American trade, the shift in
the global freight supply chain and the increased congestion at U.S.
ports and along the inter-modal system, shippers are now routing a
growing share of cargo via Canadian ports.
The CISCOR business report Executive Summary concludes, "Canada can
serve as the North American gateway at the intersection of three
powerful and shifting trade networks – the north-south North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the European-NAFTA, and the
highly-utilized trans-Pacific route."
"The desired result is a fully-integrated, seamless cargo transport
corridor moving cargo from the ports to rail and highways and to an
inland port logistics center that serves all North American markets,"
the CISCOR Executive Summary concludes.
To open the connection to the European Union, CISCOR envisions
extending the Canadian Intermodal Network to the east coast port of
Halifax.
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North-of-border link finishes NAFTA superhighway grid
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