How does the international logistics situation affect me?

Posted 12 November 2021 by Javier Ruiz Guibert

The international logistics situation: consequences and solutions 

I imagine that at this point in the year, everyone has heard something about the logistics crisis that we are experiencing, although perhaps what we do not fully know are the causes of this crisis. I am sure that, if we conduct a survey on the causes before analysing them, many of you will vote that the cause is COVID, others will vote that the cause is that the containers are not in the right place, others that China is to blame. 

I imagine that at this point in the year, everyone has heard something about the logistics crisis that we are experiencing, although perhaps what we do not fully know are the causes of this crisis. I am sure that, if we conduct a survey on the causes before analysing them, many of you will vote that the cause is COVID, others will vote that the cause is that the containers are not in the right place, others that China is to blame. 

Who is right? Whose responsibility is it for the strain the whole supply chain is under? If there were a single culprit, the solution would be relatively easy to tackle or minimise. The problem is more complex and has multiple factors. Each of them separately would not put so much stress on the supply chain, but all of them together create a perfect storm that has brought us to the point we are in. I will try to shed some light on this issue.

What is the process when the logistics chain works well?  


Let's take a look at what logistics does to know what needs to work well. The fundamental mission of business logistics is to get the products (goods and services) to the right place, at the right time and under the right conditions, contributing as much as possible to the profitability of the company.1 

To achieve this, it is responsible for processing orders, handling materials (both raw materials and finished products), packaging, transporting the goods, storage, stock control and providing the best possible service to the customer. All this at the lowest possible cost. Costs vary from product to product and from country to country. To get an idea, it is estimated that the average impact of logistics processes in Spain is 10.7% of the final cost of the product.2

To do all this work well, the logistics department must have projections of sales in the coming months, as well as know the production and transport times, in order to know how many materials are needed and when, and organise their transport and storage.

As we know, we are in a highly globalised world, where raw materials are obtained in one area of the planet, manufactured in different places and the finished product can be stored and distributed all over the world from a different location. Until last year, all this machinery was perfectly oiled and running like clockwork, so that the transport of materials arrived everywhere in the right way.

To give you an idea of how it works, the container ship MOL Triumph has a transport capacity of 20,170 TEU (one TEU is equivalent to a 20-foot container), its route starts in Dalian, continues in Asia via Qingdao, Shanghai, Ningbo, Hong Kong, Yantian and Singapore. It will then pass through the Suez Canal and continue on to Tangier, Southampton, Hamburg, Rotterdam and Le Havre. It will then call at Tangier and Jebel Ali on the way back to Asia.3

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It is not only the number of containers carried by each of these ships that is important, but also the speed at which the ports are working.4 The average time to unload a container depends on the region. According to IHS Markit data, it is less than half as long in Asia as in the US. This may be due to several factors, from the fact that Asia exports more than it imports, to the fact that most ports are more modern. While in the US the average time is about 76 seconds, in Asia it is 27 seconds per container. In Northern Europe this time averages 46 seconds. 

In the route example above, ships leave Asian ports loaded with some products and return to Asia with others. Therefore, to keep the world's logistics and production machine running smoothly, ships must be properly loaded at all points along their routes, and containers must be unloaded at ports and moved to their final destination as quickly as possible. I give the example of a sea route because 90% of consumer goods are transported by sea and therefore well-functioning motorways of the sea directly affect world trade. 

Well, this large and efficient machinery is nowadays broken.5 Why? Let's see.

The pandemic and empty containers 

The year 2020 was marked by restrictions on mobility and the confinement of thousands of people. This has clearly and decisively affected world trade in various ways. 

On the one hand, the confinement of people, the closure of production sites and port logistics terminals affected different parts of the world in different ways. Confinements and closures started in China in a very blunt manner, but soon the de-escalation of restrictions began and production sites were quickly reactivated. Elsewhere, such as in Europe, restrictions and closures of production sites lasted longer. This led to an imbalance in the shipping lanes, as ships left China full, but on their return route they were not as heavily laden as before.

As a consequence, there was a build-up of empty containers in European and American ports. In the first few months container shipments from China to the US increased by 12% and US shipments to China contracted by 14%.6


Another important factor resulting from confinement is that of changes in consumer purchasing habits. During containment and post-confinement, covid has devastated some sectors, such as hotels, restaurants and leisure. But for others it has been a boon. The World Trade Organisation forecasts world merchandise trade volume growth of 10.8%.7 This implies, according to the Netherlands Bureau of Economic Analysis, that world merchandise trade is 5% higher than before the pandemic, with China setting trade records.8 

In addition, online commerce grew exponentially9 with a consequent increase in the load on global logistics systems..10


This shortage of containers in China and the increase in world trade has generated, by the law of supply and demand, an increase in transport costs and, therefore, an increase in the price of transported goods.11 Before the pandemic and even in the early months, shipping a container from Asia to the US or Europe averaged around $1,000. By August 2021, prices are expected to be between $9,000 and $15,000. The Wall Street Journal talks of prices as high as $20,000 for rush shipments.  .12 

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The management and prevention of Covid has indirectly created other problems. For example, the Chinese authorities practice a zero-tolerance policy on Covid. The Chinese Ministry of Transport ordered all ports to have special equipment to deal with foreign vessels and requires their crews to have health certificates or negative tests before they are allowed to load and unload. Chinese ports sometimes have their own rules, depending on the region they are in, and apply extra precautions to the crews of ships that called at ports in declared high-risk countries. "China's zero-tolerance policy is good for the pandemic, but bad for the supply chain," said Dawn Tiura, executive director of the Sourcing Industry Group, a US-based association for the sourcing and procurement industry.13

Of course, it is not only the Chinese ports that have established more protocols for Covid prevention, and each country has applied its own protocols, such as the Good Practices on Covid prevention measures and action in the port cargo handling service in Spain,14 where Aerower's central warehouses are.

These protocols lead to delays in the entry of ships into port, delays in the entry of lorry drivers, stevedores and other personnel into port, as well as major restrictions in the rotation of ships' crews. All this delays unloading and therefore slows down the whole process and the movement of vessels. There is a clear reason for these protocols: by August 2021, only 15%15 of seafarers are vaccinated.16

As if this were not enough, with everyone already out of the loop, with the production centres active and despite the prevention protocols, in August 2021 the port of Ningbo-Zhoushan (which in 2020 was the third largest port in the world by cargo volume, with 28.72 million TEU) was closed for 2 weeks due to an outbreak of covid.17 This stranded ships in port for weeks, diverting ships to other ports and creating traffic jams. 

Other complicating factors


As if it wasn't enough to have routes strained by increased demand, containers in the wrong place and delays due to Covid protocols, other problems have also played their part in this logistical case. 

The Suez Canal logjam 

The bottleneck in the Suez Canal was also a determining factor. 18,19  This canal is a technological marvel that saves the need to circumnavigate the whole of Africa to get from Asia to Europe. It is a point where more than 10% of the world's maritime trade flows. In March 2021, the container ship Ever Given20 ran aground inside the canal and blocked all maritime traffic for 6 days.21 It has been estimated that it will take months to clear the delays caused by this blockage. 

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Truckers and Brexit

Believe it or not, the UK's largest freight port is jammed. When the container ships arrive in port and pass all the covid protocols, they find that there is no room in the port of Felixstowe to unload any more containers. But the cause is on land: there are not enough truck drivers to transport the goods from the port. This is not really something new, but it has been aggravated by the flight of drivers from other countries due to Covid and the restrictions on foreign workers due to Brexit.22 

It is not only in the UK that there is a shortage of lorry drivers. In the United States, California ports are also experiencing congestion as a result. The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach handle 40% of US container traffic and dozens of container ships currently have to stand outside these ports23 while they wait their turn to unload.24 The problem is such that President Joe Biden is considering mobilising the National Guard to alleviate the road transport problem.25 In addition, activity in these ports is now maintained 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. 


The rush and the bad weather 

On top of all this, the weather has not helped. The last winter has brought the strongest winds to the Pacific since 1948. This, coupled with the rush to ship as much cargo as possible by stowing some containers incorrectly, has had an unexpected consequence. This year has seen a record 1,000 containers lost at sea. While this is not a high percentage in relation to the annual container throughput, it is financially damaging to the companies, on top of all the others.26 

I want to fix it, but I mess it up more


Shipping companies in a well-meaning effort to streamline processes now load ships more.27 Before the pandemic, ships arriving at Long Beach used to carry 4000 TEU. Today they arrive with about 7000 TEU, and the ports are not prepared to unload that much cargo.28 This is stressing port facilities and further slowing down port operations. 

Los materiales desaparecen y los precios suben

All these problems, some major and some minor, are causing a global shortage of raw materials29 and an escalation in their prices. Problems have already been detected in industry30 due to shortages of microchips and semiconductors, as well as plastics, paper, cardboard,31 metals such as iron, aluminium and copper, and strategic minerals such as cobalt, lithium and indium. Again, in the face of a shortage of supply and high demand, the prices of these materials are soaring on the commodities markets. 

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To these raw material costs must be added energy costs that have not been seen for years. Gas32 and oil33 prices are reaching record highs, which is causing production costs to multiply. 

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How does this affect my order? 

All of the above could be the plot of an apocalyptic movie, but it is something that is happening here and now. And, of course, unfortunately it is something that affects your order, because at Aerower we are manufacturers and everything that happens to the raw materials we use for manufacturing affects us. 

The plastics from which we manufacture Jumper1 components have undergone a sharp price increase of between 20% and 50%34 and delivery times have risen from weeks to 6 months or even a year.35 

The price of paper, with which we print the instructions for use and the various manuals, has risen by 30% and there has been a 45-day delay in deliveries.36 The cost of cardboard, with which we package our products, has also risen by 12% in the first few months of the year.37

Of course, all the problems and cost overruns in transport are also an issue, as we receive raw materials from different locations and distribute to countries on three continents.

Our sea, air and land transport costs have increased in the same way as other importers and exporters around the globe, as we have already seen in the article, the cost of a single container has risen from $1,000 to over $9,000. 

The lack of space in transport has also affected us, with delays in deliveries of more than a month in shipments due to lack of space on ships and land transports, both in the export of our Jumper1 and spare parts and in the import of components and raw materials. 

These delays with deliveries of polymers and other raw materials with the manufacturers and suppliers we work with, as well as delays and stresses in freight services, have been an opportunity cost for Aerower and all our distributors and partners.

Another destabilising factor in the market and in logistics movements, analysed in this article, has also affected us: Brexit. Spain, as a member of the EU, enjoys freedom of movement of goods with its EU partners, the exit of the United Kingdom from this club has meant an increase in incidents when moving our products across the new border. During the first months of the year, we have suffered a 700% increase in transport incidents with the UK, due to delays in the delivery of goods and bureaucratic problems at British customs. 

Fortunately, Aerower's staff is made up of committed professionals and we are managing to solve all these problems little by little. We have diversified the origin of raw materials and suppliers in order to produce in less time, we work with the most reliable shipping companies in the market to avoid unwanted delays by assuming higher costs, and thus be able to meet the growing demand for jumpers, spare parts and accessories. In addition, we work with pallet and parcel brokers to achieve improvements in cost and delivery time, passing on to our customers the improvements we achieve and avoiding as much as possible that the current problems of the entire supply chain harm our customers.

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1 Wikipedia. Logística. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logística#Principales_indicadores_(KPI)_de_la_logística 

2 Andrés Sevilla Arias. Economipedia. Logística. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://economipedia.com/definiciones/logistica.html

3 Directorio General de Carga Internacional (DGCI) (3 de abril de 2017). Asia-Europa será la ruta del barco portacontenedor más grande del mundo. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: http://www.dgcinternacional.com/noticias/339

4 Enrique Pérez (2 de octubre de 2021) Xalaka. Estamos cargando demasiado los barcos de contenedores y esto está ralentizando aún más todo. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.xataka.com/empresas-y-economia/estamos-cargando-demasiado-barcos-contenedores-esto-esta-ralentizando-todo

5 Gómez, L., Álvarez, A. (18 de junio de 2021). El Economista. El transporte marítimo se encarece un 328% por el Covid y el atasco en China. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.eleconomista.es/empresas-finanzas/noticias/11280696/06/21/El-transporte-maritimo-se-encarece-un-328-por-el-Covid-y-el-atasco-en-China.html

6 Moldtrans (9 de agosto de 2021) Claves para entender la escasez de contenedores marítimos que está elevando los precios del transporte. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.moldtrans.com/entender-la-escasez-de-contenedores-maritimos-que-esta-elevando-precios/


7 Organización Mundial del Comercio (4 de octubre de 2021) La recuperación del comercio mundial supera las expectativas, aunque con divergencias regionales. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.wto.org/spanish/news_s/pres21_s/pr889_s.htm


8 He, L. (7 de septiembre de 2021) CNN Business. China’s trade hit record levels last month despite the global shipping crisis. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://edition.cnn.com/2021/09/07/economy/china-trade-august-covid-intl-hnk/index.html

9 Prieto, M. (20 de agosto de 2021) Expansión. La explosión del comercio electrónico. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.expansion.com/economia-digital/2020/08/20/5f3d852f468aeb11628b45c3.html


10 Directorio General de Carga Internacional (DGCI) (4 de noviembre de 2021) Canal de Panamá finaliza año fiscal con récord en toneladas de carga. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://dgcinternacional.com/noticias/visualizar.php?id=8825&pais=§or=&clave=


11 Moreno, I. (febrero de 2021) Efecto Covid: fletes al alza. Mar, 610, 10-13. https://www.seg-social.es/wps/wcm/connect/wss/893a6688-8471-4317-9396-c26f16c5c712/MAR610_FEBRERO_FInal.pdf?MOD=AJPERES


12 López, M. (26 de agosto de 2021) Xataka. El mundo del transporte marítimo está más loco (y caro) que nunca: De menos de 1.000 a 20.000 dólares para enviar un contenedor. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.xataka.com/vehiculos/mundo-transporte-maritimo-esta-loco-caro-que-nunca-1-000-a-20-000-dolares-para-enviar-contenedor


13 La República (17 de agosto de 2021) Puertos chinos colapsan por política de “tolerancia cero” sobre el COVID-19. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.larepublica.co/globoeconomia/puertos-chinos-colapsan-por-politica-de-tolerancia-cero-sobre-el-covid-19-3218196


14 Puertos del Estado. Ministerio de transportes, movilidad y agenda urbana. Gobierno de España (8 de abril de 2020) Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.puertos.es/es-es/Documents/2020-04-08%20doc%20Gu%C3%ADa%20Practicaje%20COVID-19.pdf


15 El canal (13 de agosto de 2021) Solo el 15% de las tripulaciones está vacunada. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.diarioelcanal.com/solo-el-15-de-las-tripulaciones-esta-vacunada/


16 Global Maritime Forum (12 de agosto de 2021) Low vaccination rate among seafarers, suggests Neptune Indicator. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.globalmaritimeforum.org/press/low-vaccination-rate-among-seafarers-suggests-neptune-indicator


17 El Confidencial (25 de agosto de 2021). China reabre un importante puerto tras dos semanas de cierre parcial por el covid. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.elconfidencial.com/economia/2021-08-25/china-puerto-cierre-parcial-coronavirus_3249770/


18 Wikipedia. Bloque del canal de Suez de 2021. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloqueo_del_canal_de_Suez_de_2021


19 BBC (24 de marzo de 2021) Egypt’s Suez Canal blocked by huge container ship. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-56505413


20 CBC (25 de marzo de 2021) Ship still stucks in Suez Canal as backlog grows to 150 other ships. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/suez-canal-egypt-ever-given-1.5963207 


21 Yee, V., Glanz, J. (19 de julio de 2021) The New York Times. Así fue como el Ever Given se atascó en el Canal de Suez. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.nytimes.com/es/2021/07/19/espanol/canal-suez-evergiven.html


22 Directorio General de Carga Internacional (DGCI) (17 de octubre de 2021) $ 2 millones en importaciones en riesgo debido a retrasos en el puerto de Felixstowe. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://dgcinternacional.com/noticias/visualizar.php?id=8792&pais=§or=&clave=


23 Directorio General de Carga Internacional (DGCI) (19 de octubre de 2021) Crisis de los contenedores: ¿por qué hay tantos barcos haciendo fila para entrar a Estados Unidos? Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://dgcinternacional.com/noticias/visualizar.php?id=8804&pais=§or=&clave=


24 Directorio General de Carga Internacional (DGCI) (21 de octubre de 2021) 334 buques con una capacidad combinada de 2,2 millones de TEUs esperan un sitio de atraque en los puertos del mundo. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://dgcinternacional.com/noticias/visualizar.php?id=8815&pais=§or=&clave=


25 Serbiá, X. (22 de octubre de 2021) Biden considera desplegar la Guardia Nacional para ayudar con la cadena de suministro. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://cnnespanol.cnn.com/video/biden-cadena-de-suministro-guardia-nacional-gasolina-precios-cnn-dinero/


26 Pastor, J. (28 de abril de 2021) Xataka. Se están perdiendo más contenedores en el mar que nunca: las prisas y los atajos agravan el problema de la escasez de chips. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.xataka.com/vehiculos/se-estan-perdiendo-contenedores-mar-que-nunca-prisas-atajos-agravan-problema-escasez-chips


27 Pérez, E. (2 de octubre de 2021) Xataka. Estamos cargando demasiado los barcos de contenedores y esto está ralentizando aún más todo. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.xataka.com/empresas-y-economia/estamos-cargando-demasiado-barcos-contenedores-esto-esta-ralentizando-todo


28 Rivero, N. (28 de septiembre de 2021) Quartz. Cargo ships are so stuffed that ports are struggling to unload them. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://qz.com/2065671/cargo-ships-are-so-full-that-ports-are-struggling-to-unload-them/


29 Porteiro, C. (16 de agosto de 2021) La Voz de Galicia. El desabastecimiento de materias primas se extiende a toda Europa. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.lavozdegalicia.es/noticia/economia/2021/08/16/desabastecimiento-materias-primas-extiende-europa/0003_202108G16P17991.htm


30 Bayona, E. (24 de octubre de 2021) Público. Por qué comienzan a escasear algunos productos básicos y cómo va a afectar a los consumidores. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.publico.es/economia/productos-basicos-comienzan-escasear-productos-basicos-afectar-consumidores.html


31 Antena 3 Noticias (28 de octubre de 2021) La escasez de materias primas como cartón, papel y plástico hacen temer una subida de precios en infinidad de productos. Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.antena3.com/noticias/economia/escasez-materias-primas-como-carton-papel-plastico-hacen-temer-subida-precios-infinidad-productos_20211028617aa4b2c1b52e0001321789.html


32 Trincado, B. (18 de septiembre de 2021) El País. ¿Por qué se dispara sin freno el precio del gas? Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://cincodias.elpais.com/cincodias/2021/09/17/mercados/1631893241_015742.html


33 Bermúdez, A. (15 de octubre de 2021) BBC News Mundo. Por qué se ha disparado el precio del petróleo en el mundo (y qué tiene que ver la inusual estrategia de algunos productores). Recuperado el 9 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-58920072


34 Mundoplast (16 de marzo de 2021). La escasez de plásticos no se solucionará hasta finales de este año. Recuperado el 11 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://mundoplast.com/escasez-plasticos/ 


35 Albalá, A. (19 de junio de 2021). 20 minutos.  El plástico roza el desabastecimiento y el mercado se resiente: "Hemos subido precios ya dos veces, nos está matando". Recuperado el 11 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.20minutos.es/noticia/4729992/0/desabastecimiento-plasticos-industria-aumento-precios-escasez/?autoref=true 

36 Ginés, G. y Ramírez Cerezo, A. (26 de octubre de 2021) Abc. El desabastecimiento global dispara el precio del papel. Recuperado el 11 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.abc.es/economia/abci-desabastecimiento-global-dispara-precio-papel-202110262012_noticia.html?ref=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.abc.es%2Feconomia%2Fabci-desabastecimiento-global-dispara-precio-papel-202110262012_noticia.html 


37 Ramírez, M. (17 junio 2021) reforma.com Viene nueva alza del 12% al cartón. Recuperado el 11 de noviembre de 2021 de: https://www.reforma.com/aplicacioneslibre/preacceso/articulo/default.aspx?__rval=1&urlredirect=/viene-nueva-alza-del-12-al-carton/ar2204186 


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