Airports The airports in the Port of New York and New Jersey combine to create the largest airport system in the United States, the second in the world in terms of passenger traffic, and the first in the world in terms of total flight operations.
JFK air freight cargo operations make it the busiest in the US.
FedEx Express, the world's busiest
cargo airline, uses
Newark Liberty International Airport as its regional hub.
Container terminals There are four
container terminals in the port: •
Howland Hook Marine Terminal •
Port Jersey Marine Terminal •
Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal •
Red Hook Marine Terminal Terminals are leased to different
port operators, such as
A. P. Moller-Maersk Group, American Stevedoring, NYCT, and Global Marine Terminal. In June 2010, the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey agreed to purchase from
Bayonne of land at the
Military Ocean Terminal at Bayonne, indicating that additional container port facilities would be created. The agency is expected to develop a terminal capable of handling the larger container ships that have entered service since the widened the
Panama Canal opened in 2014, some of which would not have passed under the original
Bayonne Bridge at the
Kill van Kull. A project to raise to the roadway of the bridge within the existing arch was completed in May, 2019. The terminal's combined volume makes it the largest on the
East Coast, and the third busiest in the
United States. In 2023, it handled a cargo volume of over 7.8 million
TEUs, benefitting
post-Panamax from the expansion of the
Panama Canal. As of 2023, the terminals experienced a more severe reduction in cargo volume compared to California seaports, resulting in the
Port of Los Angeles reclaiming its position as the nation's busiest.
ExpressRail , the
Staten Island Railway North Shore Branch line (foreground) connects the
Howland Hook Marine Terminal to the
Chemical Coast ExpressRail is the rail network supporting
intermodal freight transport at the major
container terminals of the port. The development of dockside trackage and
railyards for
transloading has been overseen by the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey which works in partnership other public and private
stakeholders. Various
switching and terminal railroads, including the
Conrail Shared Assets Operations (CRCX) on the
Chemical Coast Secondary connect to the East Coast
rail freight network carriers
Norfolk Southern (NS),
CSX Transportation (CSX), and
Canadian Pacific (CP). The network is partially financed by a surcharge on all containers passing through the port by train or truck.
Bulk cargo and marine transfer While most
consumer goods are transported in
containers, other
commodities such as
petroleum and
scrap metal are handled at facilities for
marine transfer operations,
bulk cargo, and
break bulk cargo throughout the port, many along its
straits and
canals. At some locations,
water pollution has led to inclusion on the
list of Superfund sites in the United States. •
Arthur Kill, along its shore the
Bayway Refinery and the
Chemical Coast •
Kill van Kull at
Constable Hook •
Gowanus Canal in
South Brooklyn •
Newtown Creek,
East River at
Greenpoint and
Hunter's Point •
Passaic River from
Newark Bay to
Passaic •
South Brooklyn Marine Terminal Car float and Cross-Harbor Rail Tunnel western end At one time, nearly 600,000 railcars were transferred annually by barge between the region's extensive rail facilities. Today, approximately 1,600 cars are "floated" on the remaining
car float in the port. The
New York New Jersey Rail, LLC transfers freight cars across the
Upper Bay between the
Greenville Yard in
Jersey City and the
65th Street Yard and the
Bush Terminal Yard in
Brooklyn. At the Greenville end,
CSX Transportation operates through Conrail's
North Jersey Shared Assets Area along the
National Docks Secondary. At
Brooklyn, end connections are made to the
New York and Atlantic Railway's
Bay Ridge Branch and the
South Brooklyn Railway. The crossing takes approximately 45 minutes. The equivalent truck trip would be 35 to long.
Freight rail has never used the
New York Tunnel Extension under the
Hudson Palisades,
Hudson River,
Manhattan, and
East River due to
electrified lines and lack of
ventilation. Overland travel crosses the
Hudson River 140 miles (225 km) to the north using a right of way known as the
Selkirk hurdle. The
Cross-Harbor Rail Tunnel is a proposed rail
tunnel under the
Upper Bay. The western portal would be located at the Greenville Yard, while the eastern portal is undetermined and a source of controversy. In May 2010, the Port Authority announced that it would purchase the Greenville Yard and build a new barge-to-rail facility there, as well as improve the existing railcar float system. The barge-to-rail facility is expected to handle an estimated 60,000 to 90,000 containers of solid waste per year from New York City, eliminating up to 360,000 trash truck trips a year. The authority's board authorized $118.1 million for the project. The
National Docks Secondary rail line is being upgraded in anticipation of expanded volumes. In September 2014, the PANYNJ announced a $356 million capital project to upgrade and expand the facility, including
Roll-on/roll-off operations. Expected to be operational about July 2016, an initial capacity of at least 125,000 cargo container lifts a year is projected.
Port Inland Distribution Network The Port Inland Distribution Network involves new or expanded transportation systems for redistribution by barge and rail for the shipped goods and containers that are delivered at area ports in an effort to curtail the use of trucks and their burden on the environment, traffic, and highway systems. The
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ),
New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), and
Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission (DVRPC), are involved in initiatives to review and develop this network. To instantiate PIDN, the PANYNJ signed an agreement November 29, 2003 with the Port of Albany to provide twice weekly barge service. By 2014, the service had been discontinued. In 2018, service between
Newark and Brooklyn to
Port of Davisville in Rhode Island was initiated.
America's Marine Highway America's Marine Highway is a similar
United States Department of Transportation initiative to capitalize on U.S. waterways for the transport of goods. In 2016, MARAD made a grant of $1.6 million to improve the terminal at Red Hook as part of the Marine Highway program. Barges carrying containers on a route between Red Hook and Newark began operation in September 2016. In 2010, a private sector service provider began
short sea shipping of
aggregate products with a
barge service between
Tremley Point, Linden on the
Arthur Kill and the
Port of Salem to address a critical, yet weak link in freight transport with ports in the
Delaware Valley. ==Cruise terminals and ferries==