New Zealand loggers, U.S. food exporters suffer from
China's virus clampdown
Send a link to a friend
[February 04, 2020] By
Muyu Xu and Praveen Menon
BEIJING/WELLINGTON (Reuters) - The economic
impact of China's coronavirus lockdown is being felt across the globe,
with exporters, miners and manufacturers of everything from coal and
timber to meat and fruit facing delays and potential shipment
cancellations.
As the most populous nation and factory floor for most of the world's
manufactured goods, China is normally the largest and most voracious
consumer of a slew of global raw materials, fuels and foods.
But the combination of an extended Lunar New Year holiday and the rapid
spread of the deadly coronavirus that has killed over 420 people and
restricted the movement of millions more has jammed logistics channels
into and across the country.
GRAPHIC: Comparing coronaviruses - https://
graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH-HUBEI/
0100B5BM3C1/corona-virus-chart.jpg
That's caused supply line backups stretching all the way to New Zealand,
the United States and beyond. However, for now, the effect is more
pronounced for smaller items such as food and forestry products - bulk
items like iron ore, fuel and coal have mainly automatic offloading and
transfer to storage that has not been affected.
Exports of goods from China have also been disrupted, leading to other
supply chain problems. Hyundai Motor <005380.KS> has said it will
suspend production in South Korea, its biggest manufacturing base,
because of the lack of spare parts from the mainland.
At Gisborne's Eastland Port on the east coast of New Zealand's North
Island, log exports to China – the port’s main source of revenue – have
been halted until further notice, while forestry workers across New
Zealand have been told to go home. The port is the country's second
largest log exporter.
China is by far the largest market for New Zealand’s export logs,
earning half its annual log income from the country.
"The industry is reeling a bit as you would expect," said Prue Younger,
CEO for the Forest Industry Contractors Association.
New Zealand's NZ$300 million in annual lobster sales to China have also
been badly hit. Local prices of rock lobster have nearly halved as
exporters seek to offload stock and fishermen have stopped fresh
landings, traders said.
"For New Zealand exporters, the timing is unfortunate because this is a
peak period for demand and good prices over the Chinese New Year," New
Zealand Rock Lobster Industry Council chief executive Mark Edwards told
news portal Stuff.
For a full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak click, https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH/0100B59Y39P/index.html
LABOR SHORTAGE
Compounding the impact of port congestion are the several city-wide
lockdowns aimed at stopping the virus' spread that are preventing people
from getting to work.
That is leading to reduced staffing for all the necessary functions at
typical entry ports, such as customs officers and freight-handling and
inspection workers.
There are also reports of a shortage of pilots for tugboats, meaning
large ships now take longer than normal to dock at certain ports.
Officials at several of the larger ports say they have been able to
sustain normal operations but smaller port facilities are struggling.
[to top of second column] |
A worker wearing a face mask transports fertilisers for export at a
port in Nantong, Jiangsu province, China January 31, 2020. China
Daily via REUTERS/File Photo
"Our port and docks are running normally. But the real problem now is the
downstream receiving ports, such as (around) Shanghai and Ningbo," said a
logistics manager at Yingkou port in the northeastern province of Liaoning, a
major iron ore and coal hub.
"What we heard from their report is that they don’t have enough people to drive
trucks and boats to transfer goods out of the ports by road and by river. So
they are having congestion and want us to slow down our pace to send vessels to
them."
The manager of a state-backed logistics firm in Ningbo said that the waiting
time has swelled to "at least four days" to unload river barges due to the
staffing shortages.
GRAPHIC: Vessel congestion off Ningbo, eastern China -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/7/8415/8396/
NingboCongestion.png
But an even bigger problem, he said, is the weak downstream demand due to the
extensive lockdowns.
"Traders are supposed to get their goods and sell it to downstream users, but
right now they can sell to nobody. So they just stock it at ports, making less
and less space for further goods to come in."
"Taking our port as an example, for small dry boats, that is less than 200,000
tonnes, you have to wait for 2 days to come in and unload. But for bigger boats,
you have to wait for longer," he said.
EXPORTER CAUTION
The knock-on effects of those delays are starting to be felt farther and farther
afield.
U.S. exporters of agricultural goods said some container shipments may be
getting delayed due to uncertainty about the grace period for demurrage, or the
fees owed to cargo buyers for any delivery delays.
Roughly 20 large ports and two interior shipping firms across China have reduced
or removed demurrage and detention fees for container, bulk and oil shipments
through February 9 to try to sustain the flow of goods to market.
Even so, exporters with weeks-long journey times to China remain concerned about
the potential for lengthy delays once their goods arrive, especially for food
that is liable to spoil if held up.
"Carriers extended the grace period to February 9, but beyond that the shippers
could face steep penalties," executive director Peter Friedmann at the
Agriculture Transportation Coalition, a U.S.-based industry body
He added that normal demurrage fees for refrigerated containers - used to ship
fish, meat and fruit - could run to $350 per container per day, potentially
leading to steep losses on low-margin shipments of perishable goods if
offloading delays are extended.
(Writing by Shivani Singh and Gavin Maguire; Additional reporting by Karl Plume
in CHICAGO, Yuka Obayashi in TOKYO; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |