MORE than 100 major shippers and
shipping firms have warned the east coast dockers union and waterfront
employers that they will divert imports to the more tranquil west coast if
stalled dock talks do not soon resume.
A coalition of beneficial cargo
owners (BCOs), agribusinesses, logistics providers led by the National
Retail Federation, "expressed deep concern" over the
breakdown in talks between the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX)
and the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA).
The two ended contract talks on
December 6 over the definition of what constituted an "automated
terminal". The current master contract covering east and Gulf coast ports
expires on September 30, noted IHS Media.
Last year, west coast employers
agreed to extend the west coast waterfront contract to July 1, 2022. That gives
BCOs four peak seasons without labour strife.
Cargo diversion is expected to
accelerate as the September deadline approaches, reversing a trend of cargo
increasingly opting for the east coast partly because of the newly expanded
Panama Canal has reduced slot costs on that route.
The west coast share of US imports
from Asia dropped by 12 per cent from 79 per cent in 2005 to 67 per cent in
2016, based in part on labour trouble at west coast ports.
The Pacific Maritime Association
(PMA) and International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) had contentious
contract negotiations in 2002 and again in 2014 to 2015 that involved crippling
union work go-slows.
Shippers stress their reliance on
certainty in cargo routing. If they enter a year in which no longshore contract
negotiations are scheduled, they plan their entire supply chain for the year
based upon assurances of port performance.
But, even if there are no early
warnings of labour strife, shippers will hedge to avoid being shut out later in
the year if contract negotiations break down.
Source : HKSG.
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