With the strike by the International Longshoremen's
Association (ILA) at the U.S. East Ports continuing and with the on-going
speculation as to how long this might last dominating many headlines, Sea-Intelligence analyses the impact that
the length of the strike will have on the global fleet and the weekly capacity
in TEU terms.
"At present, the shipping lines are pushing a full
contingent of capacity from 62 deep sea services, which, unless there is a very
rapid and unexpected resolution to the industrial dispute, will have to wait at
anchorage at the first port of call on their discharge schedule. In addition to
that, there are vessels which have already commenced their discharge rotation
and will have to wait at their second, third or even fourth port of call
depending on how much of their schedule they have already completed prior to
the strike taking place," says the update.
In the first week, the capacity
loss is at its highest (around 775,000 TEU) due to the vessels already stuck on
the U.S. East Coast plus the incoming vessels with the subsequent three weeks
showing a loss of around 443,000 TEU as only the "new" arrivals are
being counted.
"Should the strike last four weeks, causing almost
seven percent of the global fleet to be tied up along the U.S. East Coast, the
overall impact on the supply and demand equation will be very
significant," the update added.
U.S. President Joe Biden's comments surely ups the
pressure on United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) but does not necessarily
help settle the conflict, says Niels Rasmussen, Chief Shipping Analyst, Bimco.
"Beyond disagreements over salary
increases, different stands regarding port automation will also be difficult to
bridge."
USMX, on its part, says: "We cannot agree to
preconditions to return to bargaining –but we remain committed to bargaining in
good faith to address the ILA’s demands and USMX’s concerns.
For the ships already
enroute to the U.S., the only viable alternative ports appears to be Halifax in
Canada, which, however, will only be able to cater to a
fraction of the ships and cargo, Rasmussen added. "Cargo not yet shipped
could be diverted to U.S. West Coast ports but they cannot accommodate much of
the cargo without experiencing congestion and causing delays to ships."