Recent attacks on ships in the Suez Canal are again pushing companies to revisit their longer-term logistics and warehousing strategies.
Ships unable to use the canal – through which around 12 percent of global trade and 30 percent of the world’s containers pass – have been waiting in safe locations, stuck at sea or forced to take longer routes. It’s the latest disruptive event in recent years to drive companies to look at their mitigation strategies.
The current scenario reiterates what many companies have been grappling with since the pandemic – and, indeed by the blocking of the Suez Canal in 2021, when a crashed container ship blocked the key trade route for six days.
“There’s been a growing realisation that over-reliance on one route, region or country is unwise,” said Graham.
Ship use of the Suez Canal has fallen around 20 percent year-on-year, according to the International Monetary Fund’s PortWatch platform.
Even a year ago, supply chain monitoring, tracking and visibility solutions were a technology investment priority, according to JLL research.
Moving from just-in-time to just-in-case inventory management can help diversify the locations where inventories are held, Graham said.
“Reducing reliance on a factory or suppliers in one region, through reshoring a portion of the former and expanding the latter to, or close to, Europe, is becoming a strategy of choice,” she said.
Two solutions are emerging: diversification and fragmentation. The former seeing factories and suppliers move from one region to another; the latter being whereby countries begin to limit their trade partners to those which they see as aligned.
“Diversification has been playing out on a global scale since the pandemic years,” said Graham.
“But if fragmentation gains steam in Europe, whose economies rely heavily on intra-regional trade, then reshoring and near-shoring of production and suppliers is likely to accelerate.”
Decisions may be more definitive when plants and suppliers are in countries deemed to be geopolitically riskier, she added.
But change takes time. Moving a factory to another region, for example, is no small thing.
“It’s costly, and so sourcing additional suppliers in another region is more feasible.”
Meanwhile, for ports, knock-on pressure is building. Graham said container spot rates on affected routes are increasing, by as much as 140 percent between mid-December and late January (see graph). Space located near major trade gateways including ports and airports, trans-modal hubs within Europe and locations near end users (cities and factories), will be in high demand from logistics companies.
