German Port Congestion,
Supply Bottlenecks Weigh on Global Trade
Supply-chain snarls are persisting,
with more than 2% of all global shipping capacity at a standstill outside Germany’s
North Sea ports.
Congestion continued to climb
in September at Bremerhaven and Hamburg, where there are now 19 container vessels
waiting to unload, up from 17 two weeks ago, according to the latest Kiel Trade
Indicator. About 11% of all shipped goods are stuck, the report said.
Germany’s outlook for trade
deteriorated, with imports and exports slipping by 0.2% and 0.7% from the previous
month, it said.
“Congestion is preventing a
return to pre-pandemic levels,” said Vincent Stamer, head
of the Kiel Trade Indicator. “High transportation costs are hindering a further
recovery in global trade.”
In China, meanwhile, holdups
outside some ports are easing as President Xi Jinping’s “Covid Zero” approach to
combating the pandemic continues to shut down some of the world’s largest manufacturing hubs.
“In the Red Sea, the most important
sea trade route between Europe and Asia, 16% fewer goods are currently being shipped
than would be expected under normal circumstances,” according to the report.