Sea-Land Service operates one of
the world's largest fleets of container vessels and has developed the most
advanced terminal infrastructures in the industry, serving 120 ports in
80 countries.
Sea-Land's primary mission in Alaska is to provide a supply link between the Forty-ninth State and the Continental U. S., as well as with the rest of the world. To ensure this link is never broken, Sea-Land built three linehaul D-7 Class vessels (M/V's Sea-Land Anchorage, Kodiak and Tacoma), which were commissioned in 1987. Each of the 710 foot-long containerships, capable of carrying over 740 40-foot containers, maintains a schedule between the ports of Tacoma, Washington, and Anchorage, Kodiak and Dutch Harbor, Alaska. Vessels sail twice weekly from Tacoma directly to Anchorage, and then call the island Port of Kodiak. One vessel a week then makes a call at Dutch Harbor, the busiest fishing port in the world, while the other vessel returns directly to Tacoma. Transit time between Tacoma and Anchorage is three and one-half days. Additionally, a Sea-Land trans-Pacific express vessel stops at Dutch Harbor weekly as needed to expedite fresh Alaskan seafood directly to Japan and other Asian ports. The six-day service from Dutch Harbor to Yokohama is the fastest in the industry. From fresh vegetables to office supplies to new cars, Sea-Land ships transport virtually every commodity needed to keep Alaskans supplied.
Sea-Land uses the Alaska Railroad
to move containers that arrive in Anchorage inland to Fairbanks. The primary
method of moving containers to Fairbanks is over the highway using Sea-Land
linehaul trucks based in Anchorage. Sea-land also uses the railroad when
the loads are too heavy to move over the highway and for some loads when
road load limits are reduced each spring during "breakup", or our spring
thaw.
Page created11/19/98 and last updated 11/19/98 |