Miami Herald (Sunday)

Latest threat to global supply chain: storm season at sea

- BY ROBERT TUTTLE Bloomberg

Storm season is coming to the shores of Southern California, and that could make global supply-chain bottleneck­s even worse.

Close to 160 vessels are waiting to enter the Long Beach and Los Angeles port complex — some mega-sized container ships carrying as much as half a million tons of everything from consumer goods to factory inputs. The buildup of cargo outside the main U.S. gateway for Chinese exports is contributi­ng to goods shortages and prices hikes ahead of the Christmas shopping season.

But a new worry is bubbling up from the port gridlock: The area’s storm season that’s already underway will bring high winds and choppy seas, potentiall­y leading to accidents among ships jostling for space.

Ships waiting to use the Port of Los Angeles hit 14 days at anchorage this week, about the same amount of time it takes to cross the Pacific, according to port data. Before the pandemic, it was rare for a ship to be at anchor at all, Phillip Sanfield, port spokesman, said by email. The combinatio­n of stormy weather and congested waterways has become so critical that the U.S. Coast Guard issued a winter weather advisory on Thursday, requesting, among other things, that large ships remain three nautical miles apart from each other, be prepared to deploy a second anchor when winds are strong and keep their engines on standby.

The danger of ship accidents isn’t just theoretica­l. The U.S. Coast Guard last month said an oil spill off southern California – near the ports where ships were dwelling in record numbers — happened after a ship’s anchor struck an undersea pipeline operated by Amplify Energy as long as a year ago, weakening the line. The Coast Guard has also been investigat­ing an incident involving the MSC Danit cargo ship, which dragged its anchor during a winter storm last January in close proximity to an undersea oil pipeline.

Large ships such as the massive container vessels parked off the southern California coastline can be blown around, Paul Blomerus, executive director of Vancouver-based Clear Seas Center for Responsibl­e Marine Shipping, said by phone. Where there is congestion at a port, there’s an increased risks for some accidents, including collisions.

Gridlock in California’s San Pedro Bay complex is happening as COVID-19 has extended the length of time seafarers are serving on ships, leaving them tired, stressed and potentiall­y more prone to making mistakes, according Mikis Tsimplis, a professor at the City University of

Hong Kong law school and a specialist in maritime law. Ship congestion can increase the possibilit­y for mishaps even during regular winter storms, he said.

Stormy seas played a role in the loss of 3,000 shipping containers last year, according to the Alliance Safety and Shipping Review for 2021.

The California storms have already begun.

On Oct. 22, ahead of a massive rain storm that pummeled the state, the Marine Exchange of Southern California, which organizes traffic, requested that vessels voluntaril­y go out to sea ahead of the windy weather, promising that vessels wouldn’t lose their spot in line if they did so. The major rain and windstorm caused flooding in much of the state and downed power lines but didn’t result in major incidents at sea involving large commercial vessels, Amy Stork, a spokespers­on for the Coast Guard, said by phone.

While traffic volumes have increased, Coast Guard operations haven’t changed very much, except that patrols of ships at anchor are being carried out more frequently, she said.

But in the end, mitigation measures can only go so far, City University of Hong Kong’s Tsimplis said.

“The availabili­ty of good weather warning systems is a given nowadays, but the exact way a weather system will impact a specific location and combine with the local currents is not easy to predict,” he said.

 ?? NOAH BERGER AP ?? A build-up of cargo at California ports is contributi­ng to goods shortages and prices hikes as the holidays near.
NOAH BERGER AP A build-up of cargo at California ports is contributi­ng to goods shortages and prices hikes as the holidays near.

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