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Canal plays role in Panama's vote today
By Associated Press
Published May 2, 2004
PANAMA CITY, Panama - Panama's new leader, to be elected today, will have a historic decision to make: Should Panama launch a multibillion-dollar canal expansion project aimed at keeping the waterway competitive?
The question has been a key debate in the presidential race, and the decision will be a defining moment for the country, which has formally run the canal for less than five years.
The election's top two candidates, Martin Torrijos, the U.S.-educated son of former military strongman Omar Torrijos, and former President Guillermo Endara, have supported the idea, but say they want to study it more before making a final decision. The expansion project also would need approval by a national referendum.
Torrijos says it will be Panama's "most important decision of the century."
Endara recommends careful study of the project, especially the cost.
"We do not want to incur financial obligations that would mortgage the country," he said.
The annual growth of world trade and the use of cargo ships too large for the canal gates are threatening to reduce the waterway's usefulness.
An average of 35 ships move daily through the canal's 50 miles. Linking the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic, the canal moves ships - a tight fit for some - through a series of locks.
The alternative is a long trip around the tip of South America.
The Panamax class of ships, the largest that can use the waterway, are about 100 feet wide and squeeze through the canal locks with just 2 feet to spare on each side.
The larger Post-Panamax ships under construction are too wide to fit through the canal's narrowest stretches and cannot use the waterway.
The Canal Authority has spent more than $30-million in studies of future market demand and environmental repercussions. Those studies are expected to be submitted to the board of directors of the canal by the end of June, according to Francisco Miguez, coordinator of the Master Plan for the Canal.
The authority is charged with running the canal as a profitable company, and it has increased income by providing logistical as well as ship and container services. Revenue from canal operations last year was $900-million, compared with $600-million during the last year of U.S. administration.
According to canal officials, ship movement increases 2 percent a year, while cargo tonnage goes up 8 percent as the trend toward larger ships continues.
[Last modified May 2, 2004, 01:05:38]
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