The Guardian (USA)

Baltimore bridge collapse: US braces for supply chain disruption

- Jonathan Yerushalmy, Chris Michael, Maya Yang and agencies

The US transporta­tion secretary, Pete Buttigieg, has warned of “major and protracted impact to supply chains” following the closure of the Port of Baltimore for the forseeable future after Tuesday’s catastroph­ic bridge collapse, though some experts said the impact was likely to be targeted to particular regions and industries.

Spanning more than 2km and with four lanes of traffic, the Francis Scott Key Bridge – a vital artery in Baltimore’s industrial heartland – took nine years to plan and almost five to build, but came down in under a minute after being struck by a cargo ship in the early hours of Tuesday.

At least six people are presumed dead after the bridge collapsed into the Patapsco River, and the state of Maryland has declared a state of emergency.

The Maryland governor, Wes Moore, said the disaster was heartbreak­ing. The missing – all members of a constructi­on crew filling potholes on the bridge – were described as “hardworkin­g, humble men” and are reported to have been from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Mexico.

The US’s top safety regulator, the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion (Osha), has described constructi­on, where about half of constructi­on workers are Hispanic, as a “high hazard industry”.

In addition to the devastatin­g impact on the families of those who lost their lives, there are questions about the possible effects on a global economy still reeling from Covid shocks and the Red Sea crisis, which have disrupted supply chains .

On Tuesday, Joe Biden called the bridge “one of the most important elements” supporting the US north-east’s economy. Its collapse in effect shut off access to one of the busiest and most important ports in the country.

Speaking to MSNBC on Wednesday, Buttigieg said that even though there were other ports on the east coast, “there is no substitute for the Port of Baltimore being up and running.”

The immediate consequenc­es are perhaps the most clear: all the ships in Baltimore port are trapped, said Salvatore Mercoglian­o, an associate professor of history at Campbell University and host of the What Is Going on With Shipping? YouTube channel.

“That mean that vessels that are in there will have to wait for the bridge to be cleared and obviously that’s going to be a long prospect,” he said, adding that a number of vessels were also waiting to access the port.

Baltimore is the ninth busiest port in the US, and the busiest for car shipments, handling at least 750,000 vehicles in 2023, according to data from the Maryland Port Administra­tion. Motor vehicles and parts accounted for 42% of all Baltimore port imports.

General Motors (GM) and Ford have announced they will reroute affected shipments but Buttigieg said on Tuesday there was “no question” the impact would be major.

The port handled foreign cargo worth $80bn in 2023, according to the governor, meaning there will be millions of dollars in lost trade and taxes for every day that shipping vessels are blocked from accessing it.

The biggest issue, according to Mercoglian­o, will be the export of coal. In 2023, Baltimore was the second busiest US port for coal exports, with India the single biggest importer of that coal.

Most of the coal from Baltimore makes its way to India for electricit­y generation, Ernie Thrasher, the CEO of the coal trading firm Xcoal Energy & Resources, told Bloomberg.

“The big question is the impact on India more than any global impact,” Thrasher said.

Some of that coal will be rerouted, but complicate­d logistics will limit how much other ports can take.

Mercoglian­o said: “Baltimore is a major port for the export of coal, and it’s not like you can move the coal to another facility because you need specialise­d facilities for that … and those that do exist are largely at capacity. Shutting down the port of Baltimore is going to have a major impact on the transporta­tion of energy out of the United States.”

Biden has said the federal government would pay for the entire reconstruc­tion of the bridge and that he expects Congress to fund relief efforts.

Meanwhile, treasury secretary Janet Yellen said a federal supply task force was meeting on Wednesday to assess the port’s closure, adding that the Biden administra­tion “will do everything as quickly as we possibly can” to resume the port’s operations.

Beyond port operations, the community more broadly is hugely reliant on the bridge for its day-to-day functionin­g. Almost 12m vehicles cross the bridge every year.

Distributi­on warehouses owned by Amazon and FedEx are located at the port, and experts say it is likely some operations will be disrupted. An Amazon spokespers­on told Newsweek that the company was assessing the “immediate and future impacts” of the accident.

Mary Kane, the president and CEO of the Maryland Chamber of Commerce, said: “The economic impact that’s going to be felt by Baltimore and the state of Maryland is incomprehe­nsible.”

Reuters and the Associated Press contribute­d reporting

 ?? ?? The Francis Scott Key Bridge at the entrance to Baltimore harbour. Photograph: David Tulis/UPI/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
The Francis Scott Key Bridge at the entrance to Baltimore harbour. Photograph: David Tulis/UPI/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? ?? Satellite images released by Maxar Technologi­es show Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge on 6 May 2023 (bottom) and on 26 March 2024. Photograph: Satellite image ©2024 Maxar Technologi­es/AFP/Getty Images
Satellite images released by Maxar Technologi­es show Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge on 6 May 2023 (bottom) and on 26 March 2024. Photograph: Satellite image ©2024 Maxar Technologi­es/AFP/Getty Images

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