Business World

Japanese factories in Shanghai struggling to resume operations

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BEIJING — Japanese firms are struggling to reopen their factories in Shanghai, a new survey shows, indicating strains in the municipal government’s push to help key businesses resume production amid an ongoing strict lockdown in the city.

The Shanghai Japanese Commerce & Industry Club said on Thursday of 54 firms that responded to a survey it conducted between Apr. 27-30, 63 percent responded that their factories had yet to resume operations.

Out of the 37 percent that have resumed operations, over threequart­ers said production was at or below 30% of normal levels.

The club has over 2,300 members, according to its wesbite.

One of these difficulti­es firms faced was the government’s requiremen­t that they implement “closed loop management” to reopen, a process akin to a bubble-like arrangment, where workers sleep, live and work in isolation to prevent virus transmissi­on.

This was especially difficult for plants without dormitorie­s on site and many employees still faced movement restrictio­ns, the club said.

“A condition for an operation permit is that it requires a sealedoff life at the factory but then there are problems with bathing, sleeping, eating, it is impossible to live,” the survey said. “The zero-COVID policy has a negative impact on personnel interactio­ns, logistics, the ability to work,” it said.

Shanghai implemente­d a citywide lockdown on April 1 at the behest of the central government, which has stuck with a zero-tolerance policy to eliminate coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) even as it battles China’s worst outbreak since the virus first emerged in Wuhan in late 2019.

While authoritie­s in the economic hub have said that they are eager to help businesses reopen and have drawn up a priority list of close to 2,000 companies, business chambers and companies say the onerous requiremen­ts have made it difficult to restart work.

The European Chamber of Commerce in China published the results of a member survey on Thursday revealing that almost a quarter of respondent­s were considerin­g moving current or planned investment­s out of China, more than double the number at the start of the year. —

 ?? REUTERS ?? A CLOSED STREET is pictured during lockdown amid the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, in Shanghai, China, May 5.
REUTERS A CLOSED STREET is pictured during lockdown amid the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, in Shanghai, China, May 5.

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