“With the renegotiated rates, the
increase in cost is being split between the exporter and importer,” the
official said.
The Drewry World Container Index, which
serves as a composite measure of container freight rates, reached $3,786 per 40-foot
container in the week up to February 8, up 90 percent when compared with the
same week last year, and 167 percent more than average 2019 (pre-pandemic)
rates of $1,420. However, according to
the official, in the new contracts getting forged now, Indian exporters are
able to lower their burden of higher shipping costs.
“The maximum impact of the crisis on
exporters was during the first 15 days since the commitments had to be shipped
irrespective of the changes in the costs. To that extent, the exporter takes
the major part of the hit. But over a period of time, they renegotiate the
rates so the increase is borne by the exporter and importer and then passed on
to the consumer,” the official added.
The increase in overall shipping rates is still less
pronounced than those seen during the peak of the pandemic over 2020-2022, BMI,
a Fitch Solutions company, said in its summary report for January 2024.
India’s exports to Europe through the
Suez Canal (in the Red Sea) include food products, apparel, and electronics,
and its imports primarily include crude oil. New Delhi has been worried that
the attacks on cargo ships could particularly impact its agricultural exports
to Europe. “People are finding
alternatives. Those who would ship to the US East Coast are now shipping to
the West Coast and trucking it down to the US East Coast. Some are going around
the Cape of Good Hope. I believe prices will gradually come down as alternative
routes become the norm,” Ahmed told. Following the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas
war in October, there have been periodic attacks on commercial vessels
traversing the Red Sea by Yemen-backed Houthi rebels since late November.
The United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development said last month the Suez Canal, connecting the Mediterranean
Sea to the Red Sea, handled 12 percent to 15 percent of global trade in 2023. UNCTAD estimated
that trade volumes going through the Suez Canal decreased by 42 percent over
the past two months.
According to J.P. Morgan Research
estimates, 30 percent of global
container trade passes through the Suez Canal, and the Red Sea shipping crisis
is upending supply chains.