Puerto del Norte: Mexico’s New Gateway to the North

Matamoros, Aug. 13, 2025 — On the edge of the Gulf of Mexico, the sound of cranes clanking against steel echoed over the docks as Puerto del Norte welcomed its first vessels. The new deep-water port, tucked just outside Matamoros and a short highway run from the U.S. border, is being hailed as one of the most significant trade developments in northern Mexico in decades.
From the pier, you can see the brown waters where the Rio Grande meets the sea. Behind the bustle, officials spoke of a facility designed for speed — not only in loading and unloading but in getting cargo into the United States without the bottlenecks that slow traffic at older ports.
The location is no accident. It shaves as much as five hours off trucking routes compared to using southern terminals. That advantage, say trade planners, will be decisive as more companies shift manufacturing from Asia to sites closer to American buyers. One local logistics manager put it simply: “If your shipment moves today, it’s in Texas before dawn.”
Even in its first week, inquiries have poured in from automotive suppliers, electronics manufacturers, and grain exporters. Customs sheds here carry brand-new scanners; fresh asphalt marks the staging yards; and beyond the gates, construction crews are laying the early stretches of a rail line that will one day connect the port directly to Mexico’s freight backbone.
There is a quiet confidence among those on the quay. Within five years, the port’s backers believe, Puerto del Norte will be moving millions of tonnes of cargo each year — and with it, the fortunes of a region that has long lived in the shadow of bigger, older maritime hubs.
The post Puerto del Norte: Mexico’s New Gateway to the North appeared first on The Logistic News.
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