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The Panama Canal Authority has requested over $2 billion this year
to finance a major expansion of the panama canal, a project that once
complete will help to further boost Panama’s already growing economy
and real estate market.
The project, which is slated to be completed in
2014 for the centennial celebration of the opening of the canal, is
estimated to cost a total $5.25 billion. According to a February 2007
Popular Mechanics article, the expansion will use state of the art
techniques to create a third set of locks, significantly increasing the
total capacity of the shipping lanes.
With the Panama Canal currently running at nearly 90% capacity, the
Panama Canal Authority realized they must expand the aging thoroughfare
to better compete in the modern shipping industry, and accommodate the
much larger commercial vessels that currently transport goods across
oceans. The largest vessels that can currently make the voyage through
the canal are built to the Panamax standard, which take advantage of
the maximum allowable dimensions to fit through the canal, often
leaving no more than two feet of clearance between the ship and the
walls of the canal. With the addition of the new locks, the maximum
load capacity of the ships will increase from 5,000 to 12,000
containers per ship. The new third set of locks will not replace the
existing ones, but instead will augment them by allowing for the
passage of much wider vessels, and allowing vessels that currently meet
the Panamax standard to continue using the preexisting locks system.
This news is good both for Panama’s economy, as well as for those
interested in investing in Panama real estate. Real estate has been
booming in Panama, yet unemployment hovers around 7%, a situation that
fuels fear that the the real estate bubble may burst once the economy
begins to cool off. The large investment in revitalizing the Panama
Canal at nearly 15% of Panama’s GDP will provide much needed jobs for
Panama’s population and continue to bring growth to Panama’s economy
and real estate sector.
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