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Port of Los Angeles Posts Strong 2025 Cargo Results, Eyes Major Expansion

Port of Los Angeles Posts Strong 2025 Cargo Results, Eyes Major Expansion

Event and remarks at annual State of the Port

At the 11th annual "State of the Port," hosted by the Pacific Merchant Shipping Association, Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka reported on the port's 2025 performance and outlined planned investments to support future cargo growth.

2025 annual container volumes and historical context

For calendar year 2025, the Port of Los Angeles handled 10.2 million TEU (Twenty-Foot Equivalent) containers. That total represents the third-highest annual throughput in the port’s 118-year history and is only the third time annual volume exceeded 10 million TEU.

The 2025 total was down 0.56% compared with the prior year.

December 2025 monthly breakdown

Cargo throughput for December 2025 totaled 791,587 TEU, a 14.1% decrease year over year. The monthly breakdown was as follows:

  • Imports: 424,498 TEU, down 7.9% annually
  • Exports: 108,074 TEU, down 2.18% annually
  • Empty containers: 259,014 TEU, down 26.0% annually

Workforce acknowledgement and economic role of cargo

Seroka emphasized that the port’s achievements reflect the dedication of the people who operate it and stressed the central role of cargo to the U.S. economy, noting that farmers, manufacturers, retailers and consumers depend on efficient cargo movement.

Building Bigger and Build Smarter initiative

Seroka said future cargo projections are driving POLA’s "Building Bigger and Build Smarter" program, which concentrates port investments on infrastructure, technology, community benefits and environmental performance.

Pier 500 Marine Container Terminal proposal

A centerpiece of that infrastructure push is the proposed Pier 500 Marine Container Terminal, described as the first new container terminal at POLA in a generation.

POLA envisions the development spanning about 200 acres with roughly 3,000 linear feet of wharf to create substantial new capacity. In October, the port issued a Request for Proposals to test market interest and feasibility.

Seroka noted that much of the underwater foundation for Pier 500 is already in place because port staff planned decades ago for future needs, giving the project a ready-made advantage as cargo demand grows in coming decades.

POLA intends the terminal to be the "greenest and cleanest" in the world, built to accommodate next-generation ships, boost efficiency and sustainability, and generate new on-dock and supply-chain jobs.

Marine Support Facility on Terminal Island

Another priority is the Marine Support Facility, planned on 80 acres of underused land in the center of Terminal Island. Now in the design phase, the facility will serve as a centralized hub for chassis parking and maintenance and for container pick-up and drop-off.

POLA frames the facility as a "pressure relief valve" during peak cargo periods that will prevent containers from accumulating on terminals, enhance operations for drivers and terminals, and smooth freight movement through America’s Port.

Operational and technological tools improving throughput

Seroka highlighted several technology and operations tools that support port efficiency and visibility. Wabtec’s Port Optimizer has provided real-time data to thousands of POLA partners for nearly a decade, helping coordinate activity across the gateway.

The port also uses a tool called The Signal, which tracks all imports destined for the Port within a three-week window and supplies a level of visibility Seroka said no other U.S. port offers.

Additionally, POLA’s Universal Truck Appointment System has improved gate utilization by 20% for the roughly 20,000 trucks serving the port, yielding shorter waits and better route choices for truck drivers.

Looking ahead

Seroka tied these projects and tools to the port’s long-term strategy to expand capacity, improve sustainability and maintain smooth cargo flow, positioning POLA to handle expected growth while supporting jobs and the regional economy.

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