Lethbridge Herald

Red Sea attacks could push more cargo to Port of Vancouver after record year: CEO

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Attacks on cargo vessels in the Red

Sea could drive more shippers toward the Port of Vancouver after a year of record-high volumes, its CEO said.

“We know that the Red Sea impacts have caused significan­t rerouting of cargo for vessel operators to all markets,” Peter Xotta, the head of the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority, said in an interview Friday.

“I expect that that could result in an increase in the short term for cargo into the Port of Vancouver,” he said.

“We have seen a bump in volume in the early part of 2024. Some of that could be partly related to those events.”

Whether the trend continues depends on events closer to the Suez Canal, which container ships have largely avoided for months due to the ongoing conflict in the region.

Since December, maritime attacks by Iran-backed Houthi militants have pushed shippers to steer clear of the Red Sea and reroute around Africa, adding weeks to the journey.

On March 6, fighters struck the bulk carrier True Confidence, killing three civilians, the first deaths since the militants began to target ships linked to Israel, the U.S. or U.K.

A smattering of cargo vessels have opted to head east across the Pacific Ocean to North America from parts of Asia rather than make the prolonged westward voyage around the Cape of Good Hope.

“Any of these things that create greater volatility in the supply chain ultimately impact its performanc­e and its cost,” Xotta said. “So greater stability is a good thing.”

Last year, an unpreceden­ted 150.4 million tonnes of bulk, breakbulk and container goods traversed the docks at Canada’s largest port, the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority said.

The surge marked a six per cent increase from 2022, despite a sputtering global economy and a big drop in container shipments.

Bulk exports — wheat, canola and petroleum, especially — drove the increase, as did container exports and auto imports.

However, overstocke­d retail inventorie­s and cooling demand dragged down container imports — and container shipments overall — the port authority said.

“It was a mixed year at the Port of Vancouver, with growth in some sectors and softening in others,” the federal agency said in a release.

“With the pandemic early on, we saw very strong consumer purchasing driving container volumes,” Xotta said in the interview.

He also noted the subsequent decline in spending on consumer items amid a higher cost of living and expenditur­es diverted increasing­ly toward services rather than products.

“One could foreshadow that through the course of 2024 and certainly early 2025 we’ll start to see recovery,” he said. “At least that’s our hope.”

A big drop in household goods — the category accounts for nearly a third of inbound container items, from towels to television­s — drove a 12 per cent decrease in container shipments overall at the port.

Some 79 per cent of household products came from China, with Vietnam and South Korea as distant runners-up. Fewer imported constructi­on materials and industrial and auto parts also fuelled the fall in container figures.

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