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Since the start of the pandemic, global supply chains have been under severe stress from logistics snafus and things are getting worse. This is embedding in a substantial inflationary impacts

Business
Since the start of the pandemic, global supply chains have been under severe stress from logistics snafus and things are getting worse. This is embedding in a substantial inflationary impacts

By Stavros Karamperidis

Ningbo-Zhousan may not exactly be a household name, but find something in your house made in China and it’s quite likely it was delivered from there. Ningbo-Zhousan, which overlooks the East China Sea some 200km south of Shanghai, is China’s second-busiest port, handling the equivalent of some 29 million 20-foot containers every year.

At the time of writing, it has more than 50 ships waiting to dock. This is because the Ningbo-Meishan terminal, which handles about one fifth of the port’s total volumes, has been closed for a week after a member of staff tested positive for COVID. With still no word of a reopening, many more ships have diverted to alternative ports.

Unfortunately, this is the tip of the iceberg in shipping. China has eight of the top ten busiest ports in world, and they are running at well below normal capacity because of COVID restrictions. From Shanghai to Hong Kong to Xiamen, ships are in long queues to unload – and the diversions from Ningbo will be making this worse. The US west coast is also seeing bad congestion, with many ships anchored in California’s San Pedro Bay, awaiting access to the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

This has driven the cost of shipping rates for containers through the roof in recent weeks. The cost of moving a 40-foot container from China to Europe is currently running at around US$14,000, about ten times what it would normally be. So how long will this continue, and what will be the knock-on effects?

The pandemic and other problems

This situation is noticeably different to 2020. COVID restrictions had weakened the cargo-handling capacity of ports then as well, but it was less of an issue because global demand for consumer products was so much lower earlier in the pandemic. Now that many countries have vaccinated large numbers of people and their economies are reopening, demand has bounced back with a vengeance, and ports are not coping well.

On top of that have been other problems, not least the Suez Canal blockage in March. With ships stuck for a week after the huge Ever Given container ship got stranded, they were under more pressure than usual to return to Asia after they finally reached their destinations in Europe and the Americas. As a result, many didn’t wait to be fully loaded with empty containers.

This contributed to a lack of shipping containers in Asia, which was already becoming an issue because of ships not always calling in at their usual ports during the pandemic because demand was much lower than normal. The upshot is that containers have become more expensive, which has forced shipping companies to charge higher freight rates to cover the cost.

At the same time, weather has caused problems over the summer. Both the southern Chinese port of Yangtian and part of the port of Shanghai have spent periods closed in recent weeks because of typhoon alerts. The backlog has also been worsened by major importers baulking at the shipping costs and chartering their own ships instead. Home Depot, the big US home improvement retailer, did this in June for instance.

The future

There has actually been a slight decrease in shipping rates in the past ten days, which has seen the Freightos Baltic Index fall from US$10,380 to US$9,568 per 20-foot container. But this is nothing to get excited about.

It broadly reflects the fact that the price of shipping goods from China to the US has come down after many ships diverted to that route to make the most of the high prices. Other routes, such as China to Europe and Europe to the Americas, are still mostly going up in price.

Freightos Baltic Index

Freightos

As to whether this will continue, it is extremely difficult to say. Some freight companies have ordered new container ships to help address the shortage, but these vessels take two or three years to build so that is not going to make any difference in the short term.

What matters is future COVID outbreaks and to what extent China and other major port nations have to impose tough regulations to protect their populations. Perhaps we will be lucky and the situation will steadily improve from here, or perhaps this mismatch between supply and demand will endure for several years.

In the meantime, we can expect inflation to rise as importers pass on the costs of shipping to customers. Given that governments and central bankers were already worried about rising inflation for various other reasons, they could do without this extra dimension.

If the problem with shipping rates looks like enduring, it is also likely to feed into boardroom discussions about whether it is wise to rely so heavily on China as the manufacturing hub of the world. With relations between China and the west already at a low, and much talk of globalisation giving way to regionalisation, many are already arguing that they should make more consumer goods closer to home – “nearshoring”, as it is known in the trade.

Shipping rates are ten times their usual levels. NobleIMAGES/Alamy

But more imminently, one big issue will be putting the fear of God into retailers: Christmas. All those ships that diverted from their usual China-Europe route to help serve the US are cutting it fine to get back to China in time to restock. The crossing takes about 45 days, and they need to then leave China by about mid-October to make the 35-day crossing to get goods to Europe in time for December. If there is still congestion at the Chinese ports by October, this may not be possible.

The longer that this shipping crisis continues, the more that Christmas will be in trouble. It could become a huge news story in the weeks ahead as everyone looks forward to a “normal” festive season and many retailers desperately need a strong Christmas 2021 to help make up for what they lost from COVID restrictions.

If only an old man in a red suit with a sleigh could really take care of everything, we could all breathe a sigh of relief.The Conversation


Stavros Karamperidis is a lecturer in Maritime Economics, University of Plymouth. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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25 Comments

I recommend we cancel Christmas this year. It comes around far too quickly anyway and I am sure I am not the only one who is glad when Christmas is finally over.

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Too many people spend too much money they don’t have on shit they don’t need. I’d be happy to see it go.

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Don’t worry the woke minority will have it gone soon.

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Whoops sorry. Accidentally reported. Need an option for cancelling that. I was just going to say, perhaps the life of our existing landfills may be extended a little?

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Hard to get upset about boat loads of junk stuck in Chinese ports.
Perhaps there's a better way of doing things. Nah change is so hard.

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Inflation is not transitory. It is stuck in a container waiting to leave China.

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LOL. Although I think it's more likely our deflation stuck.

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Ruin Christmas? Hey maybe we could simply buy less overseas junk for a change.
Christmas can be wonderful without cheap junk...

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Eases pressure on landfill as well.

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Buy something NZ-made. It will be comparatively overpriced but at least you'll be supporting local business.

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Perhaps the Government could run a “Buy NZ Made for Christmas” campaign

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Looks like inflation will continue into next year.

Christmas and Chinese haters, enjoy.

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No one above seems to be thinking about the knock on effect of what this means for business here. Job losses, potentially nothing to sell, businesses may go to the wall. As an importer we are very much feeling this, containers stuck in singapore for 6 weeks, dangerous goods almost impossible to move etc etc...

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What about containers between NZ and Australia?
Does this mean you are better to sell all your household goods before moving to Australia rather than risk waiting 6 months for your container to arrive?

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Plenty of empty containers here. Good luck getting it on a boat though.

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Probably mainly in Akl. Maybe the overpaid stevedores are on a go slow or there is a shortage of crane operators having been laid off because of the automation project. . On the other hand it could be PoAkl automated container handling system which doesn't work or only partially works. If anything the recently departed CEO should have been fired long before the safety incidents because of the failure of the automated container handling system. There'll be some consultants running for cover if they have been involved in part of the specification. Mind you the PoAkl are mainly to blame for taking on an over ambitious automation project wanting the orchestra, conductor monkey and organ grinder all rolled into one.

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Of course, having to go to cabinet to try and get approval for full competent crane operators signed off to speed up unloading ships is bollocks (yes, I mean THE CABINET). Even then, the government aren't allowing their full needs. Somehow we have to recover, the mistakes of the past still have to be rectified. Government has to allow and support supply before we run out of food and other critical supplies.

I'm not being alarmist here. I know of a company (as yet not public) exiting that will cause supply shortages. PM & Ministers know of it, surely they would be helping to improve things before it becomes a crisis?

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Will we be out of lockdown at Christmas? Could be quite a somber affair this year if we continue with an elimination strategy.

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I think realistically that the elimination strategy is over. Or at least the feasibility of.
May take a while before that will be admitted by the powers that be.
E.g. NSW will never get back to near elimination - yet their schools, kindergartens, tradies, garden centres etc are still working.

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Maybe that's why they won't get back to elimination.
They've been a day late and a dollar short every step of the way in NSW.
We might not either, but we'll give it a good shot, and I think many commentators underestimate how many kiwis quite like how things have been here, even if we can't get overseas and there are no tourists.

Shipping problems as described could have a bigger effect on us than opening/not opening borders. ( Sorting out MIQ bookings would be valuable though)

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Perhaps we should add shipping to the brief of roads and rail.
It can become a matter of national importance.

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Yes we will be out of lockdown before December - because we are not stuffing around like so many other countries and states are.

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would be great if you managed to flesh this out with the implications for NZ ( and Aust) trade lanes.. Ship leases are driving quite a bit of these cost increases as the owners are forcing higher rentals Eg. from USD6000/ day to 60,000 /day and increasing the lease time out from 6-12 months to up to 3 years in some cases... This makes a 10 day anchorage in the Waitemata harbour waiting for a berth in POA, a much more expensive issue. NZ is a pain in the a** to service and we are losing capacity on our tradelanes thanks to a combination of issues. In my mind the terrible port operations here, and an ability for the lines to make a better return on containers going into and out of Asia, not having to lug them all the way down here means better returns for them. .
Also as a group of islands with very little primary , and secondary production outside of the farm gate, we are reliant on a hell of a lot of inputs that are imported... doesn't bode well for getting anything done let alone worrying about your Christmas day bubbles.

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I couldn’t, pleased you could.

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I'm confused, what do shipping containers have to do with Christmas? Santa delivers presents using a reindeer drawn sleigh.

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