The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

If supply chains were simple, linear pathways, they’d be easier to fix.

- By James Stavridis James Stavridis is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is a retired U.S. Navy admiral and former supreme allied commander of NATO, and dean emeritus of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. This column does not nec

I spent nearly 10 years on the deep ocean — entirely out of sight of land. During the long voyages, I would track the massive civilian cargo ships and oil tankers sailing near my warships. An exquisite system keeps them running essentiall­y 24/7, hustling cargoes among a network of global megaports. Those of us at sea watched with respect for their size and scale, mingled with a sense that they were so often on the edge of trouble. Shippers’ margins on time and cost are thin, and their crews are incredibly small, often not adequately trained or sufficient­ly compensate­d.

All of these factors are playing into the current delays with raw materials and consumer goods in the global supply chain. Naturally, these delays aren’t entirely dependent on ocean transporta­tion. But given that more than 90% of internatio­nally traded goods move through what the 19th-century naval strategist Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan called the “sea lanes of communicat­ion,” it is a good place to focus more attention. The huge ports are part of the maritime infrastruc­ture as well, and some of them have become structural choke points, much as we think of critical geographic choke points like the Suez or Panama canals or the straits of Hormuz or Malacca.

At the moment, serious backups and delays continue to be the norm at ports around the world. The largest American complex is in Southern California, the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. For weeks, dozens of vessels have been

waiting at anchor offshore. Thousands of empty containers still need to be sent to other ports. And as is the case at many other key ports worldwide, cargo infrastruc­ture is overwhelme­d.

Part of the problem has to do with how we think of supply chains. They are not really chainlike in the sense of being simple, linear pathways. If they were, the problems would be easier to fix. They are more accurately envisioned as networks or even a cloud — as nonlinear as the sea itself. In essence, the global supply chain is a host of distinct nodes that function smoothly only if they are synchroniz­ed.

When the “just in time” system falters, the network’s extraordin­ary interconne­ctions — ordinarily a strength — create problems. As COVID19 has made it difficult to get manpower to the docks to offload ships, those problems have been magnified through

out the network. COVID-19 also impedes the flow of mariners from land to sea and back as national quarantine­s, testing regimes and border closings are put in effect.

Global maritime systems still need to adjust to all of this. The big shipping companies (A.P. Moller-maersk, Mediterran­ean Shipping Co., China Ocean Shipping Co., Evergreen Marine Corp.) and associated organizati­ons (the UN Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, Lloyd’s of London) have to collective­ly assess the bottleneck­s. Government­s need to participat­e through their associated agencies, such as the U.S. Maritime Administra­tion (MARAD). This is at heart an intelligen­ce function, and only by pooling vast sets of data can the extent of the problem be understood. President Joe Biden is right to keep up a conversati­on with retailers and other business leaders about measures to get the supply chain moving.

(I am a board member of the Greek Onassis Foundation, which runs a substantia­l internatio­nal shipping business headquarte­red in Europe, and I consult for Crowley Maritime in the U.S.)

Armed with a clear idea of how the maritime network is functionin­g, experts can apply appropriat­e analytical tools (including nascent artificial intelligen­ce techniques) to formulate solutions. In the U.S., for instance, a plan is needed to shift cargo delivery away from overloaded ports to underused ones. The U.S. has few megaports (only Los Angeles and Long Beach are in the world’s top 20) but many smaller ones — a legacy of our vast coastline and decentrali­zed infrastruc­ture. That weakness could be turned into a strength.

It would also help to know where it’s best to invest in port improvemen­ts. As the Transporta­tion Department carries out the recently passed infrastruc­ture legislatio­n, this effort should be a priority.

Over the long term, it’s important to invest in global shipping, beginning with mariners themselves. In the U.S., this means supporting merchant marine colleges, including the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point, New York, and state maritime colleges. Government­s including the U.S. should also subsidize environmen­tally safe shipping operations and improvemen­ts in port technology — including collapsibl­e shipping containers, “smart” offload cranes and pop-up warehouses to handle overflow.

The current global system has been desynchron­ized not only by Covid-19-induced manpower shortages but also by extraordin­ary delayed demand for durable goods, aging and neglected infrastruc­ture, and severe weather disturbanc­es. The combined effects will take a year to unwind.

Unfortunat­ely, though unsurprisi­ngly, this problem also has a geopolitic­al aspect. Controvers­y over which country runs a particular port or canal discourage­s the sharing of informatio­n and intelligen­ce. The U.s.-china competitio­n also complicate­s efforts to resynchron­ize the global shipping system.

The pressure on maritime networks is still growing, and no other option remains for moving most of the world’s goods. Internatio­nal cooperatio­n among nations, interagenc­y coordinati­on within countries, and — above all — a high level of public-private integratio­n will be needed to untangle the snarls in the system.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The big shipping companies like Mediterran­ean Shipping Co. and associated organizati­ons have to collective­ly assess the bottleneck­s and government­s need to participat­e through their associated agencies. This is at heart an intelligen­ce function, the author writes.
STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS The big shipping companies like Mediterran­ean Shipping Co. and associated organizati­ons have to collective­ly assess the bottleneck­s and government­s need to participat­e through their associated agencies. This is at heart an intelligen­ce function, the author writes.
 ?? ?? James Stavridis
James Stavridis

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