Air draft (or air draught) is the distance from the surface of the water to the highest point on a vessel. This is similar to the "deep draft" of a vessel which is measured from the surface of the water to the deepest part of the hull below the surface, but air draft is expressed as a height, not a depth. The vessel's "clearance" is the distance in excess of the air draft which allows a vessel to pass safely under a bridge or obstacle such as power lines, etc. A bridge's "clearance below" is most often noted on charts as measured from the surface of the water to the under side of the bridge at the chart datum Mean High Water (MHW), a less restrictive clearance than Mean Higher High Water (MHHW). In 2014, the United States Coast Guard reported that 1.2% of the collisions that it investigated in the recent past were caused by vessels attempting to pass under structures with insufficient clearance. The Bridge of the Americas in Panama limits which ships can traverse the Panama Canal due to its height at above the water. The world's largest cruise ships, , and the will fit within the canal's new widened locks, but they are too tall to pass under the bridge, even at low tide (the two first ships are , but do have lowerable funnels, enabling them to pass the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark). New vessels are rarely built not clearing , a height which accommodates all but the largest cruise and container ships. The Suez Canal Bridge has a clearance over the canal. The Bayonne Bridge, an arch bridge connecting New Jersey with New York City, undertook a $1.7 billion modification to raise its roadbed to .