Live
WTI Crude $78.42 ▲1.2%· Brent $82.17 ▲0.9%· GC ULSD $2.419 ▼0.4%· Ship Channel Throughput ↑3.1% MoM· TEU Volume ↑4.2% YTD· Port Vessel Traffic 8,200 vessels/yr· WTI Crude $78.42 ▲1.2%· Brent $82.17 ▲0.9%· GC ULSD $2.419 ▼0.4%· Ship Channel Throughput ↑3.1% MoM· TEU Volume ↑4.2% YTD· Port Vessel Traffic 8,200 vessels/yr·
Deer Park Report
Gulf Coast Energy Intelligence · Independent
Deer Park, Texas
Harris County
Aerial drone view of a large cargo ship docked at an industrial port terminal
Deep Dive · Infrastructure

The Port of Houston — America's Energy Lifeline

The Houston Ship Channel is the most strategically important industrial waterway in the United States. Here's how it works, what moves through it, and why it's inseparable from the Deer Park refinery's operations.

01
What Is the Port of Houston?

The Port of Houston is one of the largest and most strategically significant ports in the United States. Unlike a traditional single-terminal seaport, it is a sprawling 52-mile industrial waterway — the Houston Ship Channel — extending from Galveston Bay inland to the heart of the Houston metropolitan area. Along its banks sit more than 200 private and public terminals, petrochemical plants, refineries, and industrial facilities.

By total tonnage, the Port of Houston consistently ranks as the #1 U.S. port for foreign waterborne commerce and the largest petrochemical complex in the Western Hemisphere. It handles over 300 million tons of cargo annually, including the majority of the crude oil, petroleum products, and chemicals that flow through the U.S. Gulf Coast energy system.

The Ship Channel was first dredged to navigable depth in 1914, transforming Houston from an inland agricultural town into an industrial powerhouse. Today it is maintained at a depth of 46.5 feet — sufficient for the Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) that deliver millions of barrels of crude oil to the Deer Park and neighboring refineries.

52 mi
Length of Houston Ship Channel from bay to port
300M+
Tons of cargo handled annually
200+
Industrial terminals along the channel
02
The Channel's Energy Role

The Houston Ship Channel is, above all else, an energy artery. More crude oil, petroleum products, and petrochemicals flow through this waterway than any other in the Western Hemisphere. It is the physical connection between global crude oil markets and the largest concentration of refining capacity in North America.

The channel handles the import of heavy sour crude oils — particularly Mexican Maya crude from Pemex's upstream operations in the Bay of Campeche — that are specifically suited to the high-complexity refineries on its banks, including the Deer Park facility. These crude grades are too sulfur-rich and heavy for simpler refineries to process profitably but are ideal for facilities like Deer Park with advanced hydrotreating, coking, and cracking units.

On the export side, the Ship Channel has become a major conduit for U.S. crude oil exports — a trade that barely existed before 2015 — as well as refined product exports, liquid natural gas (LNG), and petrochemicals shipped to markets in Latin America, Europe, and Asia. The energy export boom has fundamentally reshaped traffic patterns on the channel, with outbound cargo now rivaling inbound volumes for the first time in the port's history.

#1
U.S. port for foreign waterborne commerce by tonnage
46.5 ft
Channel depth — capable of handling VLCCs
8,200+
Vessel transits per year
03
Key Terminals Along the Ship Channel

The 52-mile Ship Channel is lined with specialized terminals serving every segment of the energy and chemical industries. Below are the most strategically significant facilities, arranged from the Galveston Bay mouth inland toward downtown Houston.

Terminal / FacilityTypeSignificance
Barbours Cut Container TerminalGeneral cargo / containersLargest container terminal in TX — 2.5M TEU capacity
Bayport TerminalContainers / breakbulkModern deep-water terminal serving Gulf Coast imports
PMX Deer Park Marine Terminal Crude OilCrude receipt / product exportPrimary crude import point for the Deer Park refinery — berths VLCC tankers
LyondellBasell Houston RefineryPetroleum refining Fuel264,000 bpd refinery adjacent to Deer Park corridor
Kinder Morgan Galena ParkPetroleum products FuelMajor refined products terminal — Colonial + Explorer origin point
Vopak Deer Park TerminalChemical storage ChemLarge independent liquid chemical terminal serving Gulf Coast petrochemical corridor
Oiltanking HoustonCrude & products CrudeMajor crude oil and refined products storage hub with extensive pipeline connectivity
ExxonMobil Baytown ComplexRefining + petrochemical ChemOne of the world's largest integrated refining/chemical complexes — 560,000 bpd
Cheniere Sabine Pass (nearby)LNG export LNGAmerica's first LNG export terminal — 30+ MTPA capacity feeding global markets
Port of Houston Authority Turning BasinGeneral cargo MixedOriginal port facility at the inland end of the channel — steel, metals, project cargo
Aerial night view of a busy industrial port with cargo ships and cranes
Night aerial of an active industrial port terminal — the Houston Ship Channel handles over 8,200 vessel transits per year across 200+ terminals. Photo: Tom Fisk / Pexels
04
How the Channel Connects to Deer Park

The Pemex Deer Park refinery sits directly on the southern bank of the Houston Ship Channel, giving it one of the most strategically advantaged positions of any refinery in North America. The facility's own marine terminal is capable of receiving Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) carrying up to 2 million barrels of crude oil per vessel — enough to run the refinery at full capacity for nearly six days.

The Ship Channel connection is not merely logistical — it is what makes Deer Park's business model possible. The refinery is specifically configured to process Mexican Maya crude, a heavy sour grade that trades at a significant discount to lighter crudes precisely because it requires complex, capital-intensive equipment to process. Deer Park's FCC unit, Delayed Coker, and hydroprocessing units convert this discounted heavy crude into premium-quality transportation fuels, capturing the spread between the cheap feedstock and the high-value product.

Without direct marine access via the Ship Channel, the refinery would be forced to rely on pipeline crude — a more expensive and less flexible supply chain that would erode the margin advantage that makes Deer Park economically superior to simpler, inland refineries.

Houston Ship Channel — Deer Park Industrial Corridor (South Bank)
Galveston Bay Entrance
Deep-water approach channel from Gulf of Mexico. VLCCs, Aframax, and Suezmax tankers transit inbound with crude. ULSD and gasoline vessels exit outbound to U.S. Atlantic Coast and export markets.
Mile 0 — Channel entrance
La Marque / Texas City Spur
Texas City industrial port — home to Marathon Galveston Bay Refinery (451,000 bpd). Shared tanker traffic with Houston Ship Channel.
~Mile 5 — Texas City Spur
PMX Deer Park Marine Terminal
Pemex Deer Park's dedicated crude import / product export berths. Can simultaneously berth a VLCC on crude receipt and a smaller products tanker on loading. Direct pipeline connection to refinery tank farm ~0.5 miles inland.
~Mile 18 — Deer Park, Harris County
Manchester / Pasadena Industrial District
Dense cluster of petrochemical storage terminals, specialty chemical manufacturers, and pipeline origin points. Vopak and Oiltanking terminals provide independent storage for regional refineries including Deer Park.
~Mile 22–26
ExxonMobil Baytown Complex
The world's third-largest refinery complex. 560,000 bpd of refining capacity plus one of the largest petrochemical manufacturing sites in North America. Deer Park and Baytown are complementary — both processing heavy Gulf crude.
~Mile 28 — Baytown, TX
Houston Ship Channel Turning Basin
The inland terminus of the navigable channel, where vessels turn around. General cargo, steel, project cargo, and breakbulk freight. Beginning of the industrial inland port.
~Mile 52 — Houston city center
05
Current Vessel Traffic — Ship Channel

Below is a representative snapshot of recent vessel movements on the Houston Ship Channel, including traffic directly relevant to the Deer Park refinery marine terminal. Data reflects typical Q1 2025 activity patterns.

Aerial overhead view of a large cargo ship loaded with containers at port
Overhead aerial of a cargo vessel at berth — crude oil tankers of similar scale arrive regularly at the Deer Park marine terminal on the Ship Channel's south bank. Photo: Tom Fisk / Pexels
VesselType / CargoStatusTerminal
Stena SupremeVLCC · Saudi Arab Medium crudeBerthedPMX Deer Park
Nordic ZenithAframax · Mexican Maya crudeDeparted Apr 13PMX Deer Park
Ardmore SealionMR Tanker · ULSD exportInbound ETA 06:00PMX Deer Park
Pacific CourageLR2 · Crude importExpected Apr 15PMX Deer Park
Celsius HelsinkiLNG carrier · U.S. LNG exportLoadingCheniere Bayou
MSC EloaneContainer · general importsBerthedBarbours Cut
Stolt EfficiencyChemical tanker · ethylene oxideDeparted Apr 14Vopak Deer Park
Global OspreySuezmax · WTI crude exportLoadingOiltanking Houston
06
Economic Impact of the Port & Channel

The Port of Houston generates an estimated $906 billion in total economic value annually for the state of Texas — a figure that encompasses direct port activity, refinery and petrochemical output, pipeline and distribution value, and the downstream economic activity that flows from processed energy products. It is, by a wide margin, the largest contributor to the Texas economy of any single piece of infrastructure.

For Harris County and the communities along the Ship Channel — including Deer Park, Pasadena, La Porte, and Baytown — the port and its associated industries represent the foundational economic layer on which nearly all other local economic activity rests. Over 1.35 million jobs in the Houston metropolitan area are directly or indirectly supported by port-related activity.

The Deer Park refinery's $2.1 billion annual regional economic contribution is a subset of this larger port economy — but it is among the most concentrated single-facility contributions, with the majority of its economic impact remaining within Harris County through wages, local procurement, property taxes, and capital investment programs like the recent $380 million reliability overhaul.

$906B
Total annual economic value to Texas
1.35M
Houston metro jobs supported by port activity
$62B
Annual state & local tax revenue from port industries
Port of Houston · Ship Channel
Key Statistics & Live Data
Port Fast Facts
Channel Length
52 miles
Galveston Bay to Houston Turning Basin
Navigable Depth
46.5 feet
Sufficient for VLCC crude tankers
Annual Cargo
300M+ tons
#1 U.S. foreign waterborne commerce port
Vessel Transits
8,200+/year
Industrial Terminals
200+
Public & private combined
First Dredged
1914
Commodity Prices
WTI Crude
$78.42 ▲1.2%
Brent Crude
$82.17 ▲0.9%
Maya Crude (Mex)
$68.20 ▲0.8%
GC ULSD
$2.419 ▼0.4%
Henry Hub LNG
$2.14 ▼1.1%
Ship Channel Traffic — Live
Vessels in Port
47
as of Apr 14
Inbound Today
12
crude + products
Outbound Today
9
ULSD + LNG + chem
At Anchor
6
awaiting berth
Deer Park Refinery Connection
Marine Terminal
Mile 18, south bank
Max Vessel Size
VLCC (2M bbl)
Primary Import
Mexican Maya crude
42% of total crude slate
Primary Export
ULSD, gasoline
Colonial Pipeline + marine