The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

This Suez crisis is about to hit home

- TIM MORRIS Tim Morris is CEO of the UK Major Ports Group.

It’s the big stuck boat that launched a thousand memes but the blockage of the Suez Canal by the Ever Given might be about to hit Scottish consumers.

There are nearly 12,500 nautical miles between Shanghai, the Ever Given’s starting port, and Dundee via the Suez Canal.

The seething mass of hundreds of cranes and millions of shipping containers on the east coast of China is a bit different from the magnificen­t V&A that graces the shoreline of the Tay. A world apart you might say.

And yet there’s a chance that if you tapped ‘buy now’ on your phone or clicked ‘take me to check out’ with your computer mouse recently the thing you’ve bought will be on the Ever Given or one of the other 400 ships caught up in the congestion.

Because behind each tap, click and item on a shop shelf sits a huge and often global machine of ships, ports, warehouses and hardworkin­g people connecting us with the farms, factories and studios which produce these goods.

As an island nation the UK is dependent on ships and ports for the movement of 95% of the goods that arrive or leave.

The device you’re using to read this article almost certainly arrived via a shipping container, probably from Asia and probably via the Suez Canal. But that figure also includes the fundamenta­ls of life such as the import of half of the UK’s food and feed needs.

It’s exports too. Large quantities of whisky travel in containers to Asia as one of Britain’s great global trade success stories.

None of this should be new or a surprise to a place like Dundee, with its centuries old history as a gateway with the world via the sea.

It still remains an important port city but in a different sense. Like Dundee’s transition from leader in jute to computer games its port is pivoting from a simple gateway for the movement of goods by investing heavily to create one of the leading locations servicing the green transition we all want.

There’s been no direct impact from the Ever Given’s unfortunat­e mismanoeuv­re and resulting three-week shipping backlog in the Suez Canal on the UK yet but we can expect a period of unpredicta­bility and disruption to supply chains.

You can be assured that ports and other logistics companies will be working hard to make sure we consumers notice as little of this as possible. But it presents a real challenge for companies that have already been coping with big rises in demand for globally shipped goods over the last six months.

More fundamenta­lly, I’ve been asked if we in the UK have become over reliant on global trade and the behemoths like the Ever Given. It’s a good question.

A combinatio­n of Covid19, Brexit and now this are likely to prompt some serious thinking about the resilience of global supply chains – although it’s more likely to centre on the way these chains are designed and managed than an expectatio­n that we’ll stop buying things made in Asia.

The choice and cost advantages benefit all of us. And there’s strong evidence that global trade makes everyone better off, including those in the poorest parts of the world.

Dundee and Shanghai may be worlds apart. But they are interconne­cted by the Ever Given and its peers. And that’s worth thinking about the next time your finger hovers over the buy button.

 ??  ?? STUCK FAST: The drama surroundin­g the Ever Given in the Suez Canal could soon impact on all of us.
STUCK FAST: The drama surroundin­g the Ever Given in the Suez Canal could soon impact on all of us.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom