(Part 4 in a Series)
It was compiled by Jay Derr, a transportation policy analyst at the Reason Foundation of Los Angeles, Calif. It opens the door for a discussion on port sustainability.
Derr observed that the two North Carolina state ports are “geographically close” – separated by only 105 nautical miles – but they “serve different purposes.”
The larger port at Wilmington is equipped to handle on- and off-load containerized cargo.
Morehead City, on the other hand, only handles general cargo, Derr wrote.
Financially, the Wilmington port contributes some $14.8 billion in “annual economic impact” to North Carolina, while Morehead City’s share is about $1.3 billion.
Combined, the North Carolina State Ports Authority operations support more than 88,200 direct, indirect and induced jobs and generate approximately $660 million in state and local tax revenue annually.
Derr commented that North Carolina’s two ports have a longstanding track record of significance as “critical gateways for U.S. goods to enter the global market.”
Furthermore, the Ports Authority “has managed its seaport assets well overall to accommodate increased economic output for North Carolina,” he said.
Brian E. Clark,
executive director of the N.C. State Ports Authority
Generally, volumes are
up, but it must be noted that a financial review from the N.C. State Auditor
concluded that during the fiscal year ending July 1, 2025, the Ports Authority
recorded a $6.3 million operating loss, compared to a loss of $4.4 million the
year before.
But to keep positive
trade flows, given the projected rising demands, expanding the capacities of
the state ports will be necessary, Derr said. The challenges and obstacles in
doing so are befuddling, at best.
“Dredging is especially relevant for North Carolina,” Derr remarked. “The two ports are not naturally deep enough.”
“The need for maintenance dredging is relatively constant for both Morehead City and Wilmington.”
He said the Wilmington port needs to be deepened from 42 feet to 47 feet to accommodate the new Ultra Large Container Vessels (ULCVs), and “Morehead City could still use a deeper draft to help accommodate larger breakbulk cargo ships.”
Dredging activities always stir up enormously complex environmental concerns, but there’s also the “painful expense” associated with repeated dredging.
All this is compounded by restraints associated with the existing, ancient federal dredging law, Derr said.
The Heritage Foundation, a pro-free enterprise think tank based in Washington, D.C., agrees. It reports: “The Foreign Dredge Act of 1906 prohibits any foreign-built or chartered ships from dredging in the United States. The result is to exclude the world’s largest dredging companies that could provide better and cheaper service.”
This needs fixing. The United States, with the largest economy in the world, has “subpar shipping ports because of this 120-year-old law that prevents their ability to expand,” according to the Heritage Foundation.
“A lack of maintenance on dredging has left U.S. harbors functioning at full-channel depth and width only 35% of the time.”
The Heritage Foundation stated: “At times, port authorities say they have asked for bids on dredging projects, but no American dredgers can respond because they are operating at full capacity. Foreign competitors have demonstrated the ability to complete projects in less time at lower costs.”
Derr recommends that North Carolina lawmakers get fully engaged and lobby to change the federal dredging statutes.
U.S. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, has championed four bills to repeal the Foreign Dredge Act of 1906 and remedy the “nation’s supply chain difficulties.”
“Dredging is a fundamental tool to maintain American economic competitiveness,” Sen. Lee said. “Our protectionist laws have hamstrung our shipping and port infrastructure. “These bills would allow us to expand ports, help secure our supply chain and move our economy into the future.”
Looking forward, Derr said the nation’s ports will need to explore innovative funding solutions that can harness the private sector’s resources and expertise to deliver major infrastructure projects on time and on budget.”
He said that public-private partnerships “can help alleviate or solve outright many of the capital funding concerns with major, costly projects such as port and harbor infrastructure expansion.”
These contractual agreements…can take various shapes and sizes, Derr commented. The key is opening access to private capital, instead of relying solely “on the politicized appropriations process within the North Carolina state legislature.”
“While the North Carolina Ports Authority is effectively run as a business, because of its reliance on state appropriations, it can be slower to adopt cost-saving techniques and technologies, since it will likely be funded at a certain level anyway,” Derr said.
“Private firms can be incentivized to bring innovative solutions to the table.”

















































