Lakes Limestone Trade Down 3.6 Percent in 2012

January 15, 2013

Shipments of limestone on the Great Lakes totaled 27,145,219 tons in 2012, a decrease of 3.6 percent compared to 2011. 

The trade was 7 percent below its 5-year average.


Shipments from U.S. ports fell 2.4 percent when compared to 2011, and slightly more – 4.1 percent – when compared to their 5-year average.  Loadings at Canadian quarries decreased 9 percent compared to 2011, and slipped almost 19 percent compared to their 5-year average.

Falling water levels and the dredging crisis took a toll in 2012.  By year’s end, a vessel that has carried as much as 35,457 tons in a single trip averaged only 29,796 tons on the three stone loads it moved in December.  The cargos were loaded at a quarry on Lake Huron and that body of water has fallen to a new record low.


U.S. ports: Calcite, MI, Cedarville, MI, Drummond Island, MI, Kellys Island, OH, Marblehead, OH, Port Inland, MI and Presque Isle, MI.  Kellys Island ceased shipping in fall 2009.  Canadian ports: Bruce Mines, Manitoulin Island and Smelter Bay (all Ontario).  

Related News

Singapore Boosts Undersea Might with Two New Submarines Britain's New Shipping Sanctions Take Aim at Russian LNG Sector Drug Gang Used Commercial Ships & Chinese Money Brokers, Italian Police Says Shippers Race to Find Alternatives as US Port Strike Looms Dutch See Rise in Russian LNG Imports, Urge Further Sanctions