Dockers never stopped.
https://www.etf-europe.org/port-congestion-dont-you-dare-blame-the-dockers/
The Covid-19 pandemic showed the vital importance of dockers to our society. Dockers have a key role in the supply chain – without port workers, the essential goods and medical supplies would have stopped arriving in our ports.
The first priority during the pandemic was to act urgently to
tackle the emergency, including more stringent health and safety measures to
protect port workers. However, during the following months, the true face of
this global crisis was revealed.
The economic and social effects of Covid-19 on European ports only
started to be visible after March 2020. It began with series of blank sailings from
Asia that implied 20% to 50% fewer vessel calls on the main Far East – Europe
container-shipping trade route. This had severe consequences for those ports
that are reliant on China-Europe trades.
The increased operation of mega-container-ships calls has brought
about another difficulty. Now, port calls are less frequent but when port calls
do happen, it’s with more cargo. The average moves-per-ship has significantly
increased, creating peaks in ship-to-ship operations and yard activity at the
terminals impacting land-side operations, particularly truck arrivals and
departures.
The dockers are working under increased pressure, with peaks
requiring increased effort on some days, followed by several days with little
or no activity at all.
Despite the difficulty, dockers have never hampered operations.
“The dockers attended work as normal and were frontline workers,
playing a crucial role in keeping cargo moving, ensuring that essential goods
were loaded and unloaded and that all shipments reached their final
destinations all over Europe” explains Terje Samuelsen,
ETF Dockers Section Chair.
Over the last months, disruptions in the supply chain have reached
unprecedented levels, leading to the current congestion in ports.
However, the causes go beyond the port sector.
The causes are entirely
unrelated to the limited availability of dockers.
On one hand, the shipping sector is stimulating the
ever-increasing size of container vessels in order to benefit from economies of
scale. This represents a challenge for the other links of the supply chain:
mega-ships require appropriate infrastructure, cause large peaks of activities,
delays, queues in ports and in the hinterland.
On the other hand, naval gigantism raises environmental and social
issues that need to be properly addressed, while also increasing occupational
health and safety hazards – as shown by the recent Suez Canal Blockage.
Furthermore, in Covid times congestion has affected most of the
industries, leading to fundamental changes in consumer behaviour, routes
to market and supply chains. All the communities had to adapt to the new normal
in their everyday life, learning how to deal with delays and disruptions. The
shipping lines shouldn’t be an exception.
Press have lately suggested that quarantine and the secondary
effects of Covid-19 vaccination on workers, together with the upcoming vacation
period, are leading to further instability of the supply chain.
“This is unacceptable” – adds Terje Samuelsen – “the real causes
of port congestion should be sought in the unreliability of the shipping
companies and the lack of proper planning to face this exceptional period,
instead of putting the burden on port workers who never stepped back during
this crisis.”
“Don’t you dare blame the
dockers!”
Berardina Tommasi
Policy Officer for Dockers
European Transport Workers' Federation
Mobile: (+32) 478 79 02 64
Phone: (+32) 2 285 45 84
Email:
b.tommasi@etf-europe.org
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