Panama Canal Averts Shipping Crisis With Its Water Plan — and Some Luck

  • More vessels cross the channel as drought conditions ease
  • Shift to La Niña weather pattern set to increase rainfall
A container ship passes through the Miraflores Locks as it transits the Panama Canal.Photographer: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
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The Panama Canal has managed to ward off a shipping crisis that threatened to upend $270 billion a year in global trade. It did so with careful water management — and a little bit of luck.

As parched conditions gripped the Central American country last year, the Panama Canal Authority slashedBloomberg Terminal the number of vessels allowed to cross each day to 22, about 60% of normal. Shippers paid millions of dollars to jump the growing queue and avoid wait times that stretched more than two weeks.