U.S. seaports processed almost 2.5 million 20-foot
equivalent units in August. That was 3% less than in July, when imports hit a
26-month high. Volume above 2.4
million TEU created bottlenecks and cargo backups in the early days of the
pandemic, according to Descartes, a supply-chain software provider.
The International Longshoremen's Association
represents 45,000 dock workers at three dozen U.S. ports from Maine to Texas
and handles almost half of the nation's ocean trade.
ILA said last week its members are prepared to hit
the streets if they do not have a new contract with the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX)
employer group in place when the current six-year agreement expires on Sept.
30.
The two sides are at an
impasse over issues ranging from wages and benefits to automation.
A.P. Moller-Maersk, the
second-largest container carrier and a member of USMX, told customers on
Tuesday that the possibility of a strike at ports including New York/New
Jersey, Houston and Savannah, Georgia, increases each day without a settled
contract in hand.
"Should a general work stoppage occur on the
U.S. Gulf and East Coasts, even a one-week shutdown could take 4-6 weeks to
recover from, with significant
backlogs and delays compounding with each passing day," Maersk said.
A recent trend by U.S.
retailers to push forward holiday promotions suggests they have been rushing in
seasonal goods to mitigate the risk of cargo getting stranded during a strike.
Walmart and Target, two
of the largest container shipping customers, held early back-to-school sales to
fend off competition from Amazon.com's Prime Day. The late timing of Thanksgiving this year is shortening the Christmas
shopping season and boosting the likelihood of early promotions.
An increase in
industrial-sector shipments also amplified the early rise in incoming volume,
trade researchers said.