Originally posted by Mordac
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Previously on "Honda pauses production after UK port woes"
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Originally posted by Whorty View PostAgain, naive or stupid?
The congestion at UK ports is causing congestion of freight vessels all over the globe. For e.g. freight co's are not planning any further ships to leave China to the UK for some weeks as they are running out of empty containers as they are building up at UK ports. It is very much caused by Brexit ... the world just loves us and the 52% that voted out
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“ Tim Stacey, chief executive of DFS, the sofa retailer which has used Felixstowe for three decades, said there was a “genuine problem” at the port which was getting worse. “As a result, our Chinese suppliers aren’t even going to Felixstowe anymore,” he said. “They are dropping deliveries at Zeebrugge, Rotterdam, Dunkirk and we are then having to use hauliers and extra lorries to get across. So there’s extra cost and it’s bad for consumers because there’s delays in deliveries.”
Virus and Brexit leave ports gasping for air | Business | The Times
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostI'm not paying to read that, but I did see in the first paragraph that the fruit is destined for Asia. The headline references 'global shipping chaos'. Brexit didn't do any of that. Not even almost...
The congestion at UK ports is causing congestion of freight vessels all over the globe. For e.g. freight co's are not planning any further ships to leave China to the UK for some weeks as they are running out of empty containers as they are building up at UK ports. It is very much caused by Brexit ... the world just loves us and the 52% that voted out
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostA genius idea, probably from a management consultant, who didn't anticipate delays due to problems with the weather, strikes in France, or a Global Pandemic. Honda have had nine months to adjust their logistics chain, and couldn't be bothered because they're closing the factory soon anyway.
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Originally posted by _V_ View Post
The real problem is the port management. Felixstowe is owned by Hutchison. I rest my case.
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Originally posted by _V_ View Post
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Port of Felixstowe: Government called on to ease congestion | Ipswich Star
The port has been experiencing congestion problems for weeks, with shipping movement disruption caused by the pandemic affecting ports nationwide.
Traders at the east Suffolk port also faced delays recently due to a huge backlog of personal protective equipment (PPE) stored there, with the equivalent of 11,000 containers of masks, gloves and aprons taking up significant proportions of available space.
UK Major Ports Group chief executive Tim Morris said: "The Covid-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented volatility in global supply chains. The impact is being felt across the world, including here in the UK.
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostWell it isn't Brexit, if that's what you're thinking. Tariffs haven't kicked in yet. It's a worldwide issue as companies and ports adapt to an increase in shipping movements. There's a shortage of containers at some Asian ports, for example, and any delays there are magnified when they reach the UK.
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostWell it isn't Brexit, if that's what you're thinking. Tariffs haven't kicked in yet. It's a worldwide issue as companies and ports adapt to an increase in shipping movements. There's a shortage of containers at some Asian ports, for example, and any delays there are magnified when they reach the UK.
The root cause is not a question of increased shipping movements, it is a question of processes, procedures and systems not being ready in time at the landing port in the UK.
I doubt the lack of containers in Guangzhou or Ningbo-Zhoushan are will contribute to the queues in Calais.
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostWhat other things are causing the problems? (since you've got your finger on the pulse of UK logistics)
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Originally posted by AtW View PostAir freight is down beacuse passenger planes not flying - they'd normally take some of freight, where as number of dedicated freight only airplanes is limited and they are all fooking busy.
Honda turns to airfreight as UK box ports face gridlock
https://www.aircargonews.net/sectors...face-gridlock/
Belly capacity is growing & freight airplanes are up YoY 12%, Express is up YoY 20%
https://www.aircargonews.net/busines...apacity-grows/Last edited by clearedforlanding; 9 December 2020, 16:06.
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Air freight is down beacuse passenger planes not flying - they'd normally take some of freight, where as number of dedicated freight only airplanes is limited and they are all fooking busy.
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostAccording to Mordac, air freight is down 90% (due to Covid), and this massive drop has resulted in air freight now going by sea, which is why all the UK sea ports are full of containers. The fact that 90% of UK air freight is less than 5% of the UK sea freight is lost n his massive logistical mind.
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