Category Archives: Supply Chains

Labor disruption coming for supply chains

Now is the time for labor unions to press ports and railways for new benefits for workers. There is a perfect storm of labor stoppages about to take place.

Thursday (that’s two days from this writing) the Teamsters Canada union (TCRC) expects to strike the CPKC railroad, one of the two largest in Canada. CPKC is also a large US and Mexico railway, and we’ve yet to see if US unions will honor a Canadian strike. The Canadian National (CN) rail line has blocked the strike by giving a lockout notice to the union. So there’s a high likelihood that most Canadian rail shipments will be shut down later this week.

The TCRC has turned down offers made in January, April and May. The labor agreements with the rails expired at the end of 2023, and the workers are working under the old contract. There have also been some rules changes by the government to reduce fatigue, that are not accounted for in the contracts. In fact, the union claims the rails want to ‘gut the collective agreement of all safety-critical fatigue provisions’. That may be hyperbole, but it’s indicative of the bitterness of disagreement.

The Teamsters represent about 10,000 workers. The Labor Minister has not issued an order for binding arbitration, so it’s likely there will be stoppages.

The cessation of rail movements means there are likely to be major disruptions at ports, where rail takes goods into the interior of Canada and also to the US. The rails are already announcing embargos which mean that they will not accept new shipments in certain areas because of expected port congestion.

The Port of Vancouver has already ordered ships on their way there to slow-steam because they fear they will not be able to move cargo out or into the port.

To top off the labor confusion, the US East Coast Ports are engaged in negotiations with the International Longshoremens Association (ILA), the major union representing 85,000 members. The ILA has indicated that October 1 will begin a strike if a new contract is not agreed. There does not seem to be a clear path to agreement.

Shippers and Ocean Carriers are already preparing. Cargo is shifting to the West Coast US Ports, where an agreement was completed last year. I expect the East Coast ILA members expect similar if not better contracts, because East Coast ports have been prospering for the last couple of years. Their first glitch was when the Panama Canal reduced its traffic due to an extended drought. Traffic started shifting to the West Coast then. Now the Panama Canal is near its former levels, and traffic is rising again. The East Coast Ports do not need a strike right now.

But that’s exactly why the unions are playing hardball.

We’ll see how it plays out.

FreightWaves Staff· Monday, August 19, 2024

Teamsters Canada Rail Conference delivers strike notice to CPKC; CN delivers lockout notice

By Charlotte Goldstone 20/08/2024

Congestion ‘rearing its disruptive and costly head’ as Canada rail strike looms

UPDATE: Rail contract talks continuing; Vancouver port acts ahead of possible stoppage

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Nick Savvides | Aug 16, 2024

US East Coast port strike the next spanner in supply chains

By David Ljunggren August 19, 20249:10 AM MST Updated a day ago

Explainer: Why Canada is on the verge of an unprecedented rail labor stoppage

Red Sea ripples spread across trades

The repercussions of the Red Sea crisis have been longer-lasting and more severe than many shippers thought. Shippers expected delays proportional to the extra sailing time. They may have expected proportional cost increases as well.

But they did not count on such factors as the extreme congestion in Singapore and in other ports. And in ports that have become pivotal, there are looming shortages of equipment such as chassis.

It looks like the disruptions will be with us awhile.

Trade besides containers is also in an upheaval. Sam Chambers’s recent Splash story points out that there is landside competition for capesize ocean shipments of coal.

Mongolia has always had big coal deposits, but moving the coal to international users was a problem. But new rail lines are making the country a viable source for China. China is also importing more from Russia. This chart from Drewry’s shows how the mix of countries China imports from has changed over the past few years.

BAr chart of China coking coal imports

The impact on shipping is that there will be less demand for capesize bulkers to import from Australia and Indonesia.

This is one more piece of evidence that global trade is radically changing. It will affect both shipowners and shippers in ways that are hard to foresee. Hold on to your hat!

By Charlotte Goldstone  29/07/2024

Red Sea ripples spread across container trades

Sam Chambers July 30, 2024

soaring Mongolian coal shipments by rail to China

Dark fleets and Sanctions

We now have two worlds of international commerce, as a result of trade wars and the Ukraine-Russia conflict. As the Western world, principally the EU, UK and related countries and the US look to tighten sanctions on Russian oil exports, some shipowners are finding creative ways to get around the rules set by the West.

One important escape hatch is to flag ships with a Flag State that doesn’t enforce any of the sanctions. While this strategy may not get access to US or EU ports, it allows substandard ships, or those that don’t want to obey rules such as those banning ship-to-ship transfers without proper environmental and safety provisions, to trade with other countries.

Two stories caught my eye this week.

The first article notes that the Cook Islands nation has become a top 30 Flag State, due to the registry of ships that trade Russian, Iranian, or Venezuelan oil, all sanctioned by the Western Powers. Cook Islands is located in Polynesia, and is self-governing, but has an external defense relation with New Zealand. It consists of 15 islands, with a total area of 91 square miles. It has an Exclusive Economic Zone surrounding it, of some 770 thousand square miles. Many of its residents also have New Zealand citizenship. The population is about 15000 as of the 2021 Census. (All figures from Wikipedia, retrieved on July 29, 2024.)

Sam Chambers July 29, 2024

Dark fleet additions see Cook Islands become a top 30 flag

Apparently tankers are the primary ships flagged there; the Russian oil trade needs ships that will carry Russian oil sold at prices exceeding the $60 per barrel cap set by the Western sanctions. Often these are substandard tankers, and since they cannot land at Western ports they may not meet safety, environmental, or ship management standards. A Flag State like Cook Islands will not be in a position to enforce any of the international standards for safe operation.

The article also points out that LNG is also starting to be traded via a shadow gas carrier fleet, largely based in Dubai. Those ships will likely also be registered in Flag States that are unable to enforce international standards.

The second article shows why the shadow fleet is arising. India’s imports of Russian crude oil are skyrocketing to 1.8 million barrels per day compared to just 88,000 bpd in 2022. Part of the reason is logistical constraints, another important part is price. India can buy sanctioned oil at the reduced sanction price from Russia. But they can also buy other Russian oil, possibly at even lower prices, using the shadow trade.

Russian ports are not located where they can conveniently trade with India. But in the dark market, oil can be swapped and traded without incurring sanction restrictions, and more favorable transport obtained. Some movement did occur from the Black Sea through the Suez Canal, but that is now limited because of the Houthi attacks on shipping in the Red Sea. Ships now need to move around the Cape of Good Hope to reach India, adding many miles and days to the voyage. It’s more profitable for a dark fleet tanker, but adds to the full cost of the oil delivered in India.

The article talks about the dangers of using the dark fleet for moving oil. We can expect more oil spills and accidents due to the substandard condition of the ships and the failure of masters to follow international rules.

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Paul Bartlett | Jul 29, 2024

Indian oil importers’ thirst for Russian crude drives dark fleet demand