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Mexico plans huge Baja port for U.S. trade

August 28, 2008 |  8:52 am

Graphic_for_baja_shipping_story Mexico's government is setting sail with the largest infrastructure project in the nation's history, a $4-billion seaport that it hopes will one day rival those of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

President Felipe Calderon is scheduled to travel to northern Baja California today to open bidding on a development that his administration hopes will catapult Mexico into a major player in North American logistics, the L.A. Times' Marla Dickerson writes from Mexico City.

Plans call for the construction of a massive port in the tiny coastal village of Punta Colonet, about 150 miles south of Tijuana, along with new rail lines to whisk Asian-made goods north to the United States. Mexico's aim is to snatch some Pacific cargo traffic from Southern California's ports, whose growth is constrained by urban development and environmental concerns.

To read on about the seaport project in Baja, click here.

Go here for more business stories and here for more on Mexico.

-- Deborah Bonello in Mexico City


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