The unfortunate collapse of Maryland’s Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has led to the tragic loss of human lives, a major blow to a city already struggling, significant traffic congestion, and potential shipping delays for nearby companies. For businesses that depend on the Port of Baltimore for imports and exports, the disruption is immediate and requires a clear-eyed response — not panic, but proactive planning and rapid rerouting decisions.

Understanding the full scope of this infrastructure crisis — and what it means for your freight lanes — is exactly what supply chain visibility software and proactive logistics partners are built to support.

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Immediate Impact on the Port of Baltimore

The Port of Baltimore serves as a critical gateway for several commodity categories. Its closure — even a partial one — sends ripple effects across supply chains that depend on its specialized capabilities.

What Moves Through Baltimore

The Port of Baltimore is not a generalist port. It handles a distinct mix of cargo that makes alternative port substitutions complicated:

  • Roll-on/Roll-off (Ro-Ro) cargo: Vehicles and farm equipment are a primary throughput category. Baltimore is one of the busiest auto import ports in the United States.
  • Bulk commodities: Coal exports and sugar imports represent significant volume — though analysts note there are existing stockpiles that buffer short-term disruptions.
  • Containerized freight: General cargo containers moved by ocean carriers represent an additional layer of complexity, especially for containers that were aboard or inbound at the time of the collapse.

Timeline for Channel Restoration

Efforts to clear the wreckage are underway. Despite the complexity of the task and obstacles in the water, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has estimated that it will take weeks — not months — to restore full access to the port. The recovery plan follows a phased sequence:

  1. Open a temporary channel — allowing easier access for recovery vessels and restoring some limited commercial traffic to the port
  2. Widen and deepen the channel — to accommodate increasingly larger vessel classes as demolition progresses
  3. Stabilize and remove the M/V DALI — the vessel must be stabilized and towed back to the Port of Baltimore for the offloading and transshipment of the approximately 4,700 cargo-laden containers aboard
  4. Restore full container carrier access — the final phase, which requires channel dimensions and depth capable of accommodating large ocean-going vessels

The temporary channel, while helpful, will not accommodate large container carriers. This means container shippers should plan for a sustained rerouting period rather than a quick resolution.

Container Cargo: What to Expect Right Now

The impact on containerized cargo depends heavily on where your containers are in the shipping process. Control Tower platform monitoring becomes essential during events like this — knowing the precise status of every container in your supply chain is the difference between a managed disruption and an uncontrolled delay.

Containers Already at Port

Containers that were already discharged from vessels at the Port of Baltimore should generally be accessible for pickup. Drayage providers and warehouse operators in the region are adjusting operations to facilitate retrieval. For containers not yet discharged, delays are expected as the port works through the operational constraints of limited channel access.

Force Majeure Notices from Ocean Carriers

Several major ocean carriers have issued force majeure notices to their customers regarding containers inbound to the Port of Baltimore. These notices carry significant financial implications:

  • The carrier considers the bill of lading terminated at the alternative discharge port
  • Costs for rerouting and/or final delivery to original destination become the shipper’s responsibility
  • Shippers must act quickly to update entry documents and in-bond filings

This is a moment where trade advisory services from an experienced customs and logistics partner pay for themselves. Understanding your liability under each bill of lading and coordinating with your customs broker on amended filings is not optional — it is urgent.

Rerouting Options: Alternative Ports Taking on Baltimore Volume

Carriers have responded quickly by offering contingency rerouting plans through alternative East Coast ports. The two primary recipients of diverted Baltimore volume are the Port of New York/New Jersey and the Port of Virginia (Norfolk).

What Alternative Ports Are Doing to Prepare

Port officials in both New York/New Jersey and Norfolk have publicly expressed confidence in their capacity to absorb additional volume. Several measures are being implemented to ensure smooth processing of the rerouted freight:

  • Expanded gate hours at receiving terminals to reduce congestion
  • Additional trucking capacity sourced from Maryland-area carriers and regional fleets
  • New York–Baltimore rail service being established to move cargo efficiently between the rerouted discharge port and the Baltimore destination market
  • Chassis supply coordination — chassis providers have confirmed sufficient inventory to service rerouting operations
  • Warehouse and drayage adjustments — regional providers are realigning capacity to the new freight flows

So far, no significant congestion has been reported at New York/New Jersey or Norfolk as a result of the diverted Baltimore volume. However, shippers should monitor conditions closely — track ocean, air, and land freight in a unified dashboard rather than relying on fragmented carrier notifications.

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Trucking, Rail, and Land Freight Implications

The bridge collapse is not only a maritime issue — it has significant implications for overland freight moving in and out of the Baltimore region.

Trucking Disruptions and Detour Costs

The American Trucking Associations estimates that approximately 4,900 trucks cross the Francis Scott Key Bridge daily. With the bridge out of service, those trucks must reroute — but not all routing options are equal:

  • Two tunnels cross the Patapsco River and remain operational
  • Hazardous cargo trucks are not permitted to use the tunnels — these vehicles must take a roughly 30-mile detour around the affected area
  • Expect added transit time, increased fuel costs, and a measurable reduction in driver productivity for affected lanes

In the short term, trucking rates in the region are likely to spike as capacity tightens relative to the detour-adjusted demand. Rail rates in the Maryland corridor may also see temporary pressure. Ocean freight rates to the broader East Coast, however, are not expected to be significantly affected — the diversion is a regional logistics challenge, not a national capacity crisis.

Export Cargo Considerations

For export cargo, the operational decisions are equally complex:

  1. Vessel agents and operators must determine whether to unload export cargo from vessels currently in port — or hold cargo aboard
  2. Export manifests must be updated to reflect the new port of export
  3. Electronic Export Information (EEI) submissions must be updated with the revised port and date of export
  4. Carriers must submit export documents — either 1302A or EEM — from the updated port

Customs and Documentation Requirements

For importers, the customs compliance picture has also become more complex. Understanding how to navigate customs clearance under rerouting conditions is essential to avoiding additional delays at the alternative discharge ports.

Key Customs Steps for Rerouted Cargo

Vessel arrival notices and manifest updates are required for any cargo originally intended for unloading in Baltimore that will now discharge at an alternative port. For cargo not originally intended for Baltimore, manifests will need to be updated, and either an entry or an in-bond will need to be filed to move the cargo from the alternative port to the final destination via truck or rail.

Special attention is required for agricultural and perishable imports. Importers and customs brokers handling agricultural cargo under a USDA import permit should review their permits immediately — they may need to contact the USDA Permit Unit to update the approved arrival ports to avoid delays or compliance issues at the rerouted port.

Supply Chain Risk Management: Lessons for Long-Term Planning

Events like the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse are not entirely unpredictable — infrastructure is aging across the United States, and port-adjacent disruptions have become a recurring feature of global supply chain management. The question is not whether your supply chain will face disruption again, but whether your organization is structured to respond when it does.

Effective supply chain risk management means building the operational architecture — visibility tools, alternative carrier relationships, diversified port access, and customs expertise — before a crisis forces your hand. The companies managing the Baltimore disruption most effectively right now are those that already had contingency plans, technology platforms that track cargo in real time, and logistics partners capable of executing rapid pivots.

For importers and exporters who route significant volume through the mid-Atlantic, this event is an opportunity to evaluate whether your current freight forwarder is giving you the proactive communication, visibility, and flexibility that modern supply chain challenges demand.

What to Do Now

If your freight moves through the Port of Baltimore — or if you have cargo currently in the port, aboard a vessel in the harbor, or inbound on an ocean carrier that has issued a force majeure notice — the following steps apply:

  1. Confirm the status of all inbound containers — whether discharged, undischarged, or aboard the M/V DALI
  2. Review any force majeure notices from your ocean carriers and understand your liability for rerouting costs
  3. Coordinate with your customs broker on amended manifests, updated entry filings, and in-bond documentation for rerouted cargo
  4. Engage with your drayage and warehousing providers on pickup schedules and temporary storage at the alternative discharge ports
  5. Monitor trucking capacity and rates in the Maryland/mid-Atlantic corridor and plan for short-term cost increases
  6. Evaluate longer-term routing alternatives if Baltimore is a primary gateway for your regular import or export lanes

Questions? CargoTrans is ready to help you navigate the disruption. Contact us to speak with a solution sales representative or customer service representative — we’ll help you plan, adapt, and keep shipping simple.