Shipping Container Costs

Started by creative666, August 30, 2021, 03:04:36 PM

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creative666

QuoteThe index shows Asia-U.S. West Coast rates at $18,345, six times higher than a year ago, and the price for shipping to the U.S. East Coast quadrupled to $19,620 per forty-foot equivalent unit. Rates from Asia to Northern Europe climbed 4% since last week, and are more than eight times higher than a year ago and 2.5 times more than at the start of the year.


  • Wildfires have disrupted inland intermodal traffic on two major rail lines serving the Port of Vancouver, Canada.
  • Devastating floods in Europe knocked out factories and river barge service.
  • COVID lockdowns have created factory and port backlogs in Vietnam and Malaysia.
  • Civil unrest in South Africa forced ocean terminals in Durban to close.
  • Typhoon In-fa is causing shipping delays in China.

A friend of mine here in Cape Town who is in wholesale footwear industry has the leather shipped from India to be manufactured in China and then shipped to South Africa has experienced a 600% increase in container fees over this year alone, effectively putting the price up $3 per shoe - but when you ship between 50,000 and 80,000 shoes in one go it tends to eat into profits.

https://www.freightwaves.com/news/are-you-shipping-me-32000-container-move-from-china-to-la

rcjordan


rcjordan


creative666

#3
Same with most business - the more frequently and higher volume you order the better the price

Rumbas

Got a friend in shipping and former Maersk director.. they never made so much as they do now..

Adam C

BBC News - Why even giant ships can't solve the shipping crisis
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-58479148

rcjordan

>BBC

"Sending one 40ft container from Asia to Europe costs $17,500 (£12,650), more than 10 times the price of a year ago"

Here ya go, Brad....
"businesses may also have to rethink their reliance on global supply chains that bring parts or products from single factories halfway round the world. "

Brad



Quote"businesses may also have to rethink their reliance on global supply chains that bring parts or products from single factories halfway round the world. "

There are too many critical points of failure with single factories across the globe unless you are willing to warehouse and stockpile a strategic reserve of critical parts.

Consolidation into 'one factory' can be taken too far.

rcjordan

WORLD ECONOMY:
Surging shipping costs will drive up prices for some consumer products by 10%, new UN report finds

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/19/surging-shipping-costs-to-drive-consumer-price-inflation-unctad-says.html