Global Supply-Chain Workers Warn of System Collapse and Shortages of Everything

October 15, 2021 in News, Video by RBN Staff

source:  needtoknownews

Cargo ship, Youtbe
Alex at Youtube channel Applico uses several news articles to explain the conditions that could lead to a global supply-chain collapse. He says a major problem is labor shortage. Governments have created harsh conditions by implementing sever Covid policies and vaccine mandates, and many people have left their jobs. In the shipping industry, some seafarers have not been allowed to leave their ships for 18 months. One worker took six vaccines to placate authorities. The cost to ship a container has increased 500%. Cargo ships have been delayed for weeks in the Long Beach and Los Angeles harbors in California that receive 40% of America’s imports; the average wait time for unloading is 8.7 days. Trains are running at capacity, but there is a shortage of trucks and drivers. The second video goes into more detail about transportation networks and interdependency and gives tips on how to prepare for shortages of goods. -GEG

Seafarers, truck drivers and airline workers have endured quarantines, travel restrictions and complex Covid-19 vaccination and testing requirements to keep stretched supply chains moving during the pandemic.
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But many are now reaching their breaking point, posing yet another threat to the badly tangled network of ports, container vessels and trucking companies that moves goods around the world.In an open letter Wednesday to heads of state attending the United Nations General Assembly, the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) and other industry groups warned of a “global transport system collapse” if governments do not restore freedom of movement to transport workers and give them priority to receive vaccines recognized by the World Health Organization.
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“Global supply chains are beginning to buckle as two years’ worth of strain on transport workers take their toll,” the groups wrote. The letter has also been signed by the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the International Road Transport Union (IRU) and the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF). Together they represent 65 million transport workers globally.
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“All transport sectors are also seeing a shortage of workers, and expect more to leave as a result of the poor treatment millions have faced during the pandemic, putting the supply chain under greater threat,” it added.
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Guy Platten, secretary general of the ICS, said that worker shortages are likely to worsen towards the end of the year because seafarers may not want to commit to new contracts and risk not making it home for Christmas given port shutdowns and constant changes to travel restrictions.
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Fragile supply chains
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That will heap pressure on stretched supply chains and could, for example, worsen current challenges with food and fuel supply in the United Kingdom.
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“The global supply chain is very fragile and depends as much on a seafarer [from the Philippines] as it does on a truck driver to deliver goods,” added Stephen Cotton, ITF secretary general. “The time has come for heads of government to respond to these workers’ needs.
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When Karynn Marchal and her crew were told that they wouldn’t be allowed to go on shore upon docking in Hokkaido, Japan it was a big hit to morale.
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“None of us knew how long it would go on for,” the 28-year old chief officer of a car-carrying ship told CNN Business.
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That was more than 18 months ago. Marchal — and hundreds of thousands of seafarers like her — have not been permitted shore leave since.
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After weeks on board a ship, a couple of hours on shore provides much needed respite. But seafarers can only leave a vessel in order to travel elsewhere, usually to return home. Marchal considers herself “one of the luckier ones,” because she has at least been able to make it home to the United States.”
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There are people who have been stuck at sea for over a year,” she said.

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