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David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024

About the Author

Melissa Newsham

Melissa Newsham is a research associate at the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii.

Customers ultimately will be the ones to foot the bill, thanks to America鈥檚 protectionist maritime law.

Shipping giant Matson, based in Hawaii, recently announced it is buying three new containerships from the Philly Shipyard in Pennsylvania for $1 billion 鈥 hundreds of millions of dollars higher than global prices.

But the company likely isn鈥檛 concerned much about because its customers 鈥 mainly in Alaska, Hawaii and Guam 鈥 ultimately will be the ones to foot the bill, thanks to America鈥檚 protectionist maritime law known as the Jones Act, likely will remain strong.

The 104-year-old law quashes meaningful competition, both foreign and domestic, by requiring that all goods shipped between U.S. ports be on ships that are U.S. built, U.S. flagged and mostly American owned and crewed.

The law was intended to strengthen America鈥檚 maritime industry in the name of national security, but it has had the opposite effect 鈥 and American consumers are paying the price.

Matson鈥檚 news release about its capital outlay said the three vessels represent 鈥渁n investment of approximately $1 billion鈥 and will 鈥渕atch the size and speed of Matson’s two existing Aloha Class ships, Daniel K. Inouye, and Kaimana Hila, which were also built by Philly Shipyard and entered service in 2018 and 2019, respectively.鈥

Honolulu port views showing Matson, Pasha and Young Brothers areas. The International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) is striking ports from Maine to Texas and at this point (October 1st, 2024) the strike is not expected to  affect Honolulu unless it spreads to the west coast.  (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Shipping containers stacked up at Honolulu Harbor. A maritime law governs shipping rules to the islands that critics say restricts competition. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)

What the news release failed to mention is that the nearly identical Aloha Class ships built in 2018 and 2019 at the time 鈥 compared to more than $333 million for each of the new vessels.

But even $209 million was vastly more than the prevailing world price. According to the , U.S.-built ships often come with a price tag at least four times higher than those built abroad.

For example, in 2022, two containerships powered by liquid natural gas ordered from South Korea cost just and came with double the cargo capacity of the new ships Matson is buying. And an LNG-fueled containership with five times the capacity was recently ordered from a Chinese shipyard .

It鈥檚 not like U.S.-built ships are any better than ships built overseas. In fact, most U.S.-built ships these days rely heavily and foreign-made parts.

Not only that, the few U.S. shipyards still capable of building oceangoing vessels are not even wholly owned by Americans anymore. This includes the Philly Shipyard, earlier this year by a Korean conglomerate.

Nevertheless, Matson is bound by the Jones Act to buy U.S.-built ships at crushingly high prices, but apparently it doesn鈥檛 mind.

Turns out, Matson is among the most ardent defenders of the protectionist law. Early last year, it posted an essay on its website titled and its recent called the Jones Act 鈥渁 long-standing cornerstone of U.S. maritime policy.鈥

The company is also a prominent member of the , the country鈥檚 leading Jones Act lobby group, and a Matson executive, in fact, is of AMP, which the Jones Act as a 鈥渃ornerstone of US maritime safety and security.鈥

Most important for Matson, the Jones Act serves as a virtually insurmountable for potential competitors 鈥 not only foreign, but domestic as well.

Matson admitted as much in its latest annual report, 鈥淚f the Jones Act were to be repealed, substantially amended or waived and, as a consequence, competitors were to enter the Hawaii or Alaska markets with lower operating costs by utilizing their ability to acquire and operate foreign-flagged and foreign-built vessels and/or being exempt from other U.S. regulations, the Company鈥檚 business would be adversely affected.鈥

Matson does have one major competitor in the Hawaii market: Pasha, which is also represented on AMP鈥檚 board of directors. Together, Matson and Pasha have a lock on the Hawaii waterborne transportation market, and Hawaii consumers have little choice but to pay what the two companies charge.

A 2020 study commissioned by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii the Jones Act costs Hawaii residents about $1.2 billion a year, or about $1,800 per average Hawaii family 鈥 essentially a hidden 鈥淛ones Act tax鈥 borne by the state鈥檚 consumers. The study found the Jones Act鈥檚 U.S. shipbuilding requirement alone costs Hawaii鈥檚 economy an estimated $531 million annually.

In short, Matson鈥檚 $1 billion investment in its new overpriced ships is made possible thanks to the Jones Act, which protects it and similar companies from competition, and enables it to pass along its unreasonable expenses and operating inefficiencies to its customers.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Author

Melissa Newsham

Melissa Newsham is a research associate at the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii.


Latest Comments (0)

With Trump in Office after 01.20.2025, (A Business Man) the "Republican Minority in Hawaii" may be in a great position to "Support & Advocate Against" the "Stronghold & Monopoly" of Matson (PASHA is just a Decoy as "Competition" so Matson isn't Considered a Monopoly) due to the Jones-Act.The Republicans have a awesome opportunity to really bring down the "Cost of Living" (All 90% of Hawaii Goods/Supplies are Shipped In) considering Trump enjoys "Being a Gamechanger In ALL things Political."Do the Republicans have the "Intestinal-Fortitude" to "Rise to the Occasion" or fall inline for Matson Political Financial Donations?

PSpects · 1 month ago

It seems like the two choices we are given is to either endure crushing economic serfdom in order to support a handful of wealthy shipping insiders, or fling our doors open and drop all security measures that protect us from hostile foreign competition. There's got to be a reasonable middle ground, but when the people who warn us about the danger of the latter continue to ignore the disturbing trend of our increasingly foreign owned ports it puts a giant hole in their argument and makes one wonder what they are really defending.

allisona13 · 1 month ago

And the national security justification is rapidly becoming even more of a factor. It is almost December 7th again. What do you remember about history? Now use your imagination ...

Nikita808 · 1 month ago

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