Business Day

A Scrooge Christmas awaits UK

Huge cargo bottleneck at ports

- Siddharth Philip and Deirdre Hipwell

Sirens wailed as cranes lifted containers from the Ever Genius, a ship stretching about 400m along a berth this week at the UK port of Felixstowe.

The warnings for British dockworker­s might well have been alarms for the global economy. Handling more than a third of the UK’s ocean freight, Felixstowe is battling a collision of incoming full containers and outgoing empties.

Logjams like this are worsening around the world, including on the US West Coast, where Los Angeles port terminals will run 24 hours a day at the urging of President Joe Biden.

A tropical storm in the Pacific, meanwhile, threatens to further slow shipping from Shenzhen to Singapore.

For the UK, the supply crunch is more acute because it is more dependent on trade than many other advanced economies and because Brexit aggravated a trucker shortage. The shipping crisis is converging with spiking energy costs at just the wrong time if Christmas, as Prime Minister Boris Johnson promises, will be better than 2020’s locked-down holidays.

If goods shipped to the island nation from Asia are not on the water by now, experts doubt whether they will make it by December 25.

The average door-to-door transit time for ocean cargo to the UK from Asia has risen to more than 70 days, up from about 55 a year ago, according to Hong Kong-based Freightos, an online shipping marketplac­e.

MAERSK’S MOVES

Congestion at Felixstowe is causing such long delays that Copenhagen-based AP MollerMaer­sk, the world’s largest container carrier, has found it faster to reroute some larger vessels to mainland Europe to offload cargo onto smaller ships that return to UK ports.

Felixstowe has just two berths for the industry’s biggest ships, but plenty of smaller docks, according to Maersk.

In a statement on Wednesday, Maersk said it was working closely with“Felixstowe operators to help alleviate the situation and steadily continue the evacuation of empty containers from the yard to make possible the discharge of full containers”.

The chief culprit is not so much overwhelme­d port infrastruc­ture but a lack of truck drivers to move the containers a labour shortfall estimated at 100,000.

The government has acknowledg­ed that just 20 UK visas have been issued to heavy goods vehicle (HGV) drivers from abroad who took up the emergency offer of employment.

Felixstowe issued a statement this week, saying the vast majority of import containers are cleared for collection within minutes of arriving and that there are more than 1,000 unused haulier bookings most days. It also said the situation “is improving and there is more spare space for import containers this week than at any time since the beginning of July when supply chain impacts first started to bite”.

Jon Swallow, cofounder of Felixstowe-based Jordon Freight, which moves goods between Britain and the EU, said that he does not see the situation easing yet.

“It’s definitely not getting better, that’s for sure,” he said. “There’s still no sign on the horizon of any EU drivers changing their minds. They’re busy doing other stuff in Europe. If demand continues, there is no solution.”

It is not just the boxes that are piling up at the UK’s busiest gateway for containeri­sed goods

so are the headaches, the delivery uncertaint­ies, and the shipping costs for importers and exporters.

Gary Grant, founder and executive chair of the UK toy shop The Entertaine­r, said he had 30 containers stuck at Felixstowe, incurring storage costs.

This compares with normal times when he never paid such fees because the containers were offloaded from the ships and transferre­d to warehouses as soon as they arrived in port.

“One container alone has already cost me £1,300 in storage costs. Some of my containers have been stuck at Felixstowe for three weeks when ordinarily we would clear them within two days,” he said in an interview. “So our costs are rising as we can’t get the containers out and it’s slowing down the availabili­ty of stock.”

Although The Entertaine­r’s shops are currently “rammed full of toys as it had brought

in” products earlier, anticipati­ng congestion problems, he expects “by the time we get to mid- to late November there will be widespread shortages of toys.

“People are already starting to shop early for toys and in the end it’s customers that create shortages,” he said. J Sainsbury has put off its toy sale, usually held in October, to later in November to make sure it is stocked well enough to meet expected demand while the supply chain congestion is causing delays in shipments.

THERE’S STILL NO SIGN ON THE HORIZON OF ANY EU DRIVERS CHANGING THEIR MINDS. THEY’RE BUSY DOING OTHER STUFF IN EUROPE.

Jon Swallow Jordon Freight cofounder

Other retailers told Bloomberg customers should expect gaps on shelves because it will be harder to replenish fast-selling lines quickly. In a bid to prevent shortages of key items for Christmas, such as toys and decoration­s, retailers could deprioriti­se the delivery of other, potentiall­y less essential items at this time of year, such as bedding and pillows.

Andrew Opie, director of food and sustainabi­lity at the British Retail Consortium, said retailers are trying to find alternativ­e routes “but further disruption may be unavoidabl­e.

“This comes on the back of a very challengin­g 18 months for supply chains due to Covid-19 and the disruption to global shipping and transport logistics,” he said.

ParcelHero, a home-delivery service, said Britain might have to rely on a “Dunkirk-style” removal of goods from Europe, a reference to the hundreds of civilian boats that helped rescue English troops from the European mainland in World War 2.

“Retailers are going to have to reprioriti­se their orders from overseas, and shoppers will need to pounce on items online and in-store as early as possible, in case shortages escalate further,” said David Jinks, head of consumer research at ParcelHero.

Across the Felixstowe complex, which is run by Hutchison Ports, containers were stacked five high in yards that looked close to capacity.

The walk to find evidence of supply shortcomin­gs was not long: some shelves of household goods at a nearby Lidl supermarke­t were empty late on Wednesday, with the store posting a sign saying it was sorry that “some products may be delayed due to recent unforeseen events”.

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