Depends. Most Baltic ports are not warm water, and Midwestern port cities on the Great Lakes freeze. A lot of ports on the Korean peninsula and northern Japan also freeze over. They obviously aren’t the important ports like Rotterdam, LA, or Singapore, but they are vital to local economies, especially if it’s your only port.
They sure didn’t, but i was down at Marblehead this weekend and there was still plenty of ice build up along the shore. Not sure how things looked on the upper lakes, but that is where most of the Great Lakes shipping originates from these days.
I imagine it’s pretty regional with climate change for all ports that used to always freeze. Plus depending on the tributaries there’s always the Mississippi as a port for much of the same region as the great lakes.
What’s a warm water port?
A port that doesn’t freeze in winter.
So, essentially, 99% of all port cities?
Depends. Most Baltic ports are not warm water, and Midwestern port cities on the Great Lakes freeze. A lot of ports on the Korean peninsula and northern Japan also freeze over. They obviously aren’t the important ports like Rotterdam, LA, or Singapore, but they are vital to local economies, especially if it’s your only port.
The great lakes didn’t do much freezing this year
They sure didn’t, but i was down at Marblehead this weekend and there was still plenty of ice build up along the shore. Not sure how things looked on the upper lakes, but that is where most of the Great Lakes shipping originates from these days.
I imagine it’s pretty regional with climate change for all ports that used to always freeze. Plus depending on the tributaries there’s always the Mississippi as a port for much of the same region as the great lakes.
That’s why those cities built ports.
That’s why those ports matter.
It’s what percentage of countries have one that would matter.
Well, most port cities not in the artic.
Ooohhh. I can see why that would matter.
Vancouver then.
Does it count when it freezes already in fall?