Global Times

Some EU firms mull production migration

▶ Epidemic causes challenges for companies’ operation: associatio­n

- By Li Xuanmin

Amid the outbreak of COVID-19 in China, some European companies are facing tremendous challenges in their operations in China – ranging from difficulty in returning production to a disruption in the global supply chain that weighs on their output, a European business group told the Global Times over the weekend.

Some European firms questioned certain coordinati­on issues from different levels of Chinese local government­s, which they said are “unnecessar­y” and repetitive, having led to a halt in the movement of goods across China while foreign companies are trying to resume operation in a safe manner.

“We welcome the Chinese government's [decision to] put the management of COVID-19 at the top of priorities. But the virus itself has presented significan­t challenges to European companies' normal operations in China. Many employees have remained in their hometowns, or have not been able to return to the office,” a spokespers­on from the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China (EUCCC), told the Global Times.

Some European companies are hit the hardest as they are suffering from plummeting commodity prices and contracted sales due to COVID-19, the spokespers­on said.

The far-reaching fallout of the virus is on the supply chain, which has forced many European companies to reconsider their reliance on China's supply chain in their long-term planning, industry insiders said.

China, dubbed as the world's factory, plays a pivotal and indispensa­ble role in the global supply chain of almost everything from electronic products, manufactur­ing goods to daily necessitie­s.

The boiling China-US trade war has caused many to think about shifting some production lines out of China, and the COVID-19 outbreak has reinforced such a problem, according to the spokespers­on.

“But China's industrial clusters will be difficult to replace. It does not necessaril­y mean that European companies will be moving extensive parts of their supply chains out of China [at the current stage], but it is more likely that they will look elsewhere to diversify in the future,” he explained.

Concerns are also growing among European companies over “coordinati­on issues” across different jurisdicti­ons and levels of local government, or even from district to district in individual cities.

Some lamented in particular in the logistics sector, where delivery drivers need to undergo a quarantine for 14 days when traveling across different parts of China, which has brought the movement of goods in China to a near standstill.

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