NAVIGATING the waters of the ongoing red Sea crisis poses significant challenges for carriers and shippers alike, as networks remain highly volatile with rapid shifts, according to Denmark's Sea-Intelligence.
'The Red Sea crisis is clearly not over yet, and the carriers networks are extremely volatile and prone to quick changes. From a shipper perspective, the transit times will clearly increase with the round of Africa routing,' said Sea-Intelligence CEO Alan Murphy.
'It will be a bit more than a week longer from Asia to North Europe and up to two weeks longer into the Mediterranean. Whilst this is certainly a serious problem for many shippers, we should keep in mind that these disruptions are no way near to the ones caused during the pandemic.
'We would like to make it abundantly clear that the current capacity outlook is fraught with a high degree of uncertainty, however, the present data shows that the shippers could expect a capacity crunch for Asian exports in the coming weeks,' said Mr Murphy.
'On Asia-North Europe, the impact is quite visible due to a combination of some services being held back in departure from Asia in the short-term awaiting re-routing, and some services clearly arriving late into Asia, thereby causing a rapid shortfall in the middle weeks of January, with a steep capacity drop now expected for the week of January 22.
'The seeming capacity spike in late December/early January is more an artifact of origin delays and should be given less attention. A similar trend is seen on both Asia-Mediterranean and Asia-North America east coast, but a week earlier,' said Mr Murphy.
'That said, the temptation is to call this a disaster, but such language would be inappropriate when the current crisis is placed in the context of what the supply chains had to endure during the pandemic.'
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'The Red Sea crisis is clearly not over yet, and the carriers networks are extremely volatile and prone to quick changes. From a shipper perspective, the transit times will clearly increase with the round of Africa routing,' said Sea-Intelligence CEO Alan Murphy.
'It will be a bit more than a week longer from Asia to North Europe and up to two weeks longer into the Mediterranean. Whilst this is certainly a serious problem for many shippers, we should keep in mind that these disruptions are no way near to the ones caused during the pandemic.
'We would like to make it abundantly clear that the current capacity outlook is fraught with a high degree of uncertainty, however, the present data shows that the shippers could expect a capacity crunch for Asian exports in the coming weeks,' said Mr Murphy.
'On Asia-North Europe, the impact is quite visible due to a combination of some services being held back in departure from Asia in the short-term awaiting re-routing, and some services clearly arriving late into Asia, thereby causing a rapid shortfall in the middle weeks of January, with a steep capacity drop now expected for the week of January 22.
'The seeming capacity spike in late December/early January is more an artifact of origin delays and should be given less attention. A similar trend is seen on both Asia-Mediterranean and Asia-North America east coast, but a week earlier,' said Mr Murphy.
'That said, the temptation is to call this a disaster, but such language would be inappropriate when the current crisis is placed in the context of what the supply chains had to endure during the pandemic.'
SeaNews Turkey