РефератыИностранный языкStSt Lawrence SeaWay Essay Research Paper Geog4030The

St Lawrence SeaWay Essay Research Paper Geog4030The

St. Lawrence Sea-Way Essay, Research Paper


Geog.4030


The St. Lawrence Sea-Way


Penetrating 3,540 kilometers (2,200 miles) into interior North America, the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Sea-way navigation system, completed in essentially its present form in 1959, was regarded as one of the great engineering accomplishments of the 20th century and an outstanding example of international cooperation. . It was intended to remove much of the disadvantage of the continental interior in importing and exporting overseas. It was also designed to meet the increasing needs for electric power on both sides of the United States-Canada border.


DEVELOPMENT OF THE SEAWAY


The discovery and prospective exploitation of the iron ore north of the Gulf of St. Lawrence made the seaway project politically practicable. The main bottleneck in the chain of waterways was the 177 kilometers (110 miles) above Montreal. Improvement of that stretch was authorized by the Canadian Parliament in 1951 and by the U.S. Congress in 1954. Construction commenced in August 1954, and the route was opened for through traffic in April1959. Navigation benefits and costs, and hence toll receipts, were originally to be 71 percent Canadian and 29 percent United States; these proportions were slightly changed later. The Canadian portion of the waterway is maintained and operated by the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority, and the United States portion by the St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation.


COMMODITY MOVEMENTS


Seaway traffic consists of both bulk and general cargo, in contrast to internal Great Lakes traffic, which is almost entirely bulk cargo: grain, iron ore, coal, lime-stone, chemicals, and p

etroleum products. Seaway traffic is dominated by down bound grain, mostly for export from Canada and the United States, with lesser volumes of up-bound iron ore


.


THE FUTURE OF THE SEAWAY


Many factors contribute to the long-term decline of seaway traffic. An important trend is the shift in the direction of both U.S. and Canadian intercontinental trade from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Associated with the shift to the Pacific is not only rapid industrialization in east and southeast Asia, but also organizational and technological changes in long distance transportation in North America, facilitating substitution of a land-bridge for many movements that otherwise would have used the Panama Canal. An increasing proportion of the world’s ocean-going ships exceeds the size limitations of the seaway’s channels and locks. Modern highways, including the Interstate system in the United States, the Trans-Canada, and other express highways in Canada, and the growth of inter- city long-haul trucking, have further reduced the use of the seaway. In spite of these disadvantages, the sea-way’s future is not entirely negative. Even if it were not used, existence as a competitive facility is an incentive overland carriers both rail and highway taketheir rates lower than otherwise. Some industries with the Great Lakes region in both the United States a Canada produce and receive heavy and bulky items which cannot be transported overland. Without the sea-way such establishments would be tempted to relocate.The St. Lawrence Sea-way was partially motivated by the reasoning of reducing the transportation rate disadvantage of interior North America relative to coastal locations, where direct all-water routes are available.

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