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China Reopens World’s Third Busiest Port After Partial Virus Halt

A key terminal at Ningbo-Zhoushan port is back in action after a Covid disruption, but air freight was also suspended at Shanghai Pudong Airport last week for the same reason


Trucks are seen at a container terminal at Ningbo Zhoushan port in Zhejiang province, China, on August 15, 2021. Morgan Stanley says "Asia's productivity dynamic is strong". Cnsphoto via Reuters.

 

China reopened a key terminal at Ningbo-Zhoushan, the world’s third-busiest cargo port on Wednesday, after a shutdown to control the coronavirus caused backlogs through supply chains – but disruptions at a major airport are now sending transport costs soaring.

Several cargo aircraft workers at Shanghai Pudong International Airport tested positive for the coronavirus in the past week, sparking a suspension in freight operations.

That has led to a spike in air freight rates of “around 30%”, Seko Logistics said.

The company added that it has rerouted cargo to different airlines and airports to avoid delays, after the current suspension starting last Friday.

“The closure is currently estimated to last around seven to 14 days,” it said.

There have been flight cancellations at Pudong while in the industry, staff resignations following tighter quarantine rules have dragged handling times and created a “backlog for upcoming flights”, said logistics company Ligentia in another recent statement.

The situation piles stress on already-stretched global supply chains.

The shipping network is still reeling from recent port closures, as exporters work to meet soaring demand for goods from Western consumers and comply with strict domestic virus controls.

Air cargo disruptions

The air cargo disruptions come shortly after a partial halt at the eastern Ningbo-Zhoushan port, starting two weeks ago when a worker at its Meishan terminal tested positive for the coronavirus.

The terminal handles a fifth of the container volume at Ningbo-Zhoushan and the hold-up forced ships to other Chinese ports, which were left facing their worst levels of congestion in seven years, reported Chinese media outlet Caixin this week.

The Ningbo-Zhoushan port handled almost 1.2 billion tons of goods in 2020.

But Ningbo authorities said late on Tuesday that restrictions will be lifted from Wednesday morning.

Calling for a “resumption of work and production”, authorities added that business should also prioritise loading and unloading stranded trucks, a notice republished by state broadcaster CCTV said.

Chinese port workers are routinely tested for Covid-19, and the affected worker had been fully vaccinated.

Similarly, the infected air cargo workers in Shanghai were fully vaccinated as well, according to state media reports.

China has been battling a resurgence of Covid-19 in recent weeks caused by the highly infectious Delta variant, but strict lockdowns and mass testing has helped push new case numbers back down.

• AFP and Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

China Economy Loses Momentum as Factory Output, Retail Sales Disappoint

Covid’s resurgence dampens China’s services sector growth 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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