The Southland Times

Manufactur­ers face uncertaint­y of supply

- Evan Harding evan.harding@stuff.co.nz

Southland manufactur­ers are among many nationwide struggling to get supplies into the country in a timely fashion so production can continue and orders met.

Otago-Southland Employers’ Associatio­n chief executive Virginia Nicholls said the hold-up of shipping containers at Ports of Auckland was a significan­t issue for many manufactur­ers.

Manufactur­ers who imported stock and ingredient­s from overseas needed it arriving on time so work could continue.

‘‘Now they have to hold a bit more because they don’t know when the container is coming, so there’s a lot of uncertaint­y out there,’’ Nicholls said.

There were ‘‘not too many’’ manufactur­ers who weren’t affected, she said. Among those facing challenges were engineerin­g companies and food companies.

Ceri Macleod, the general manager of Sorec, a profession­al body representi­ng the manufactur­ing engineerin­g sector across the southern region, said a number of its members had reported delays in receiving goods from overseas.

‘‘This puts additional pressure on the manufactur­ing engineerin­g sector, particular­ly in the southern region,’’ she said.

‘‘Delays can have a significan­t impact on production and ability to fulfil orders on time.’’

Some of the issues could be addressed by pulling together as a network, but that placed extra pressure on its members and their businesses.

Gareth Lyness is the sales and supply-chain manager at Blue River Dairy, an Invercargi­ll business that exports infant formula from sheep, goat and cow’s milk.

He said the company sourced most of its ingredient­s and packaging from New Zealand.

But some came from overseas, he said, and ‘‘what used to take four weeks takes eight weeks ... or it could take 12 [weeks].’’

Despite not having to stop production at any stage, a number of shipping containers with plastic tops for infant formula cans were delayed at the port.

However, Blue River had other products it was able to manufactur­e to cover the delay, Lyness said.

The company had bought in more ‘‘safety stock’’ so it was sitting there in case ingredient­s didn’t arrive. ‘‘There’s a cost to that but the effect of not doing it and not producing is much greater.’’

The company’s logistics team had been able to manage the situation by dealing with suppliers and using multiple ports and shipping lines, he said.

Fonterra global supply chain director Gordon Carlyle said the dairy giant was experienci­ng some challenges getting a very small amount of packaging and ingredient­s into the country.

‘‘However, our ability to adapt our operations and product mix means our manufactur­ing operations are not impacted. At this stage there are no supply issues at our Edendale site.’’

Lance Coupland, the managing director of Coupland’s Bakeries, said it had machinery coming from the United States that would be two months late, and its suppliers of coconut and condensed milk had experience­d constraint­s in getting it into the country. But the company hadn’t been too badly affected.

Retailers were also struggling to get enough product into the country to sell, with the issue highlighte­d before the Christmas buying rush.

‘‘It’s been a significan­t issue, no doubt,’’ Nicholls said.

‘‘And it’s going to take a long time to solve all of this. It won’t be solved in the next few months.’’

 ?? JOHN HAWKINS/STUFF ?? Gareth Lyness of Blue River Dairy says the infant formula exporter has bought in more ‘‘safety stock’’ in case some ingredient­s don’t arrive.
JOHN HAWKINS/STUFF Gareth Lyness of Blue River Dairy says the infant formula exporter has bought in more ‘‘safety stock’’ in case some ingredient­s don’t arrive.
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