Aerial shot of a massive cargo ship arriving in the Port of Long Beach, California.
Aerial shot of a massive cargo ship arriving in the Port of Long Beach, California
Halbergman/Getty Images
  • As port congestion worsens, local officials and logistics executives are seeking ways to alleviate clogs.
  • The City of Long Beach issued a statement on Friday that it will temporarily permit additional container stacking.
  • The policy came after a logistics CEO took to Twitter to make suggestions following a three-hour boat tour of the port.

As US shipping ports grow increasingly congested, logistics leaders and local officials are seeking solutions to the national supply chain crisis.

The City of Long Beach, California, issued a statement on Friday announcing it will temporarily permit additional container stacking to free up space and alleviate port congestion.

The announcement came shortly after Ryan Peterson, CEO of the freight logistics company Flexport, took to Twitter to share a similar recommendation after detailing his observations from a three-hour boat tour of the overloaded complex in Long Beach.

In a lengthy Twitter thread, Peterson – who noted that port operations in Long Beach were "at a standstill" on Friday, with "containers piling up in the terminal yard" due to lack of space – expressed the urgency of the situation and called for action.

"It seems that everyone now agrees that the bottleneck is yard space at the container terminals," Peterson wrote on Twitter. "The terminals are simply overflowing with containers, which means they no longer have space to take in new containers either from ships or land. It's a true traffic jam."

As part of the temporary order, the City of Long Beach is allowing up to four containers to be stacked at one time, up from two under standard policy. In some cases, five containers can be stacked if a property is granted permission from the city's fire prevention department.

"It has recently come to the City's attention the Municipal Code contains zoning provisions that limit the number and/or height of shipping container storage, that if relaxed for a short time could provide some assistance during this national crisis," the City of Long Beach wrote in a statement.

Large containers on commercial dock in Long Beach, California.
Large containers on commercial dock in Long Beach, California.
Michael Wells/Getty Images

In Southern California, the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles have been in a state of near-paralysis, even after workers were recently granted permission by the Biden Administration to unload ships for 24-hours a day. According to the Marine Exchange, this week there was a record of 169 boats floating off the ports, with some waiting upwards of 13 days to be unloaded.

Lack of space for shipping containers has led truckers in Los Angeles to leave them lining the sides of residential streets. Meanwhile, the White House has considered bringing in the National Guard to help unload containers in Southern California and help alleviate a lack of truck drivers due to the labor shortage.

Peterson wrote on Twitter that the supply-chain crisis has become "a negative feedback loop that is rapidly cycling out of control" adding that "if it continues unabated will destroy the global economy."

"We don't need to do the best ideas. We need to do ALL the ideas," he wrote.

Read the original article on Business Insider