Technical Data
Port Specifications
- UNLOCODE
- USNNS
- Country
- 🇺🇸 USA
Conditions
Current Weather
Location
Coordinates
36.9667°N, 76.4333°W
View on Google Maps →Live Data
Port Congestion
30-Day Berth Occupancy Trend
Waiting Vessels Trend
Port-call activity
Arrivals, time in port and cargo operations detected from AIS — the position-inferred congestion signal, with the full dwell distribution rather than a single average.
- in port
- in port
- · 2.3 d
- · 28 h
- · 13 h
- in port
- · 2.8 d
- in port
- · 2 h
- · 23 h
- · 45 h
- · 3 h
- in port
- in port
Expected arrivals
5 inboundVessels underway broadcasting a destination that resolves to this port, closest first. Distance is the real sea route (around land and through canals); the computed ETA is at the vessel’s passage speed. The crew’s own reported ETA is shown alongside for comparison.
| Vessel | Type | Distance | Speed | ETA (computed) | Crew ETA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PATAGONIA | Bulk Carrier | 99 nm | 1.7 kn | 30 Jun | 30 Jun |
| GOLDEN FRIGO | Bulk Carrier | ~2826 nm | 12.5 kn | — | 4 Jul |
| STAR VIRGINIA | Bulk Carrier | ~3290 nm | 12.0 kn | — | 12 Jul |
| PEAK HAKU | Bulk Carrier | ~3334 nm | 12.8 kn | — | 3 Jul |
| BW NARA | Bulk Carrier | ~3729 nm | 12.9 kn | — | 13 Jul |
Risk & quality
Port risk & quality
A coverage-weighted blend of recorded Port-State-Control detentions, marine casualties and live congestion at Newport News. Higher means more risk exposure for a ship calling here — it is a count of recorded events, not a judgement of the port's management.
Built from 67% of the three signals.
Method. Each signal is normalised to 0–10 against an empirical cap, then blended weighting safety (detentions 0.40, casualties 0.35) above operational congestion (0.25). A port is scored only on the signals it has data for, and the weights renormalise — a missing signal is never credited as a safe 0.
Coverage. PSC and casualty data here is regional (US, UK, Canada), so most ports show only congestion and carry a low-confidence flag. Detention/casualty counts come from a country-scoped name match (≈60% of US detentions resolve); unmatched records are dropped, not force-fit.
Detention and casualty signals are screened against open port-state-control and marine-casualty records, combined with our own AIS-derived congestion. Updated Jun 23, 2026.
Community
Port Comments