Typhoon In-Fa Causes More Chinese Freight Chaos

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The typhoon In-Fa forced the closure of Shanghai’s container port and airport over the weekend & More freight delays are expected in China this week, says an article published in The LoadStar.

Things returning normal

And last week, the typhoon brought devastating rainfall and flooding in China’s central Henan province, disrupting operations at Zhengzhou (CGO), a major air freight hub for cargo carriers such as Cargolux.

A spokesperson for the airline said on Friday: “Flight delays have been experienced, but things are returning to normal. Although cargo flights are not restricted, customs processing of imports into CGO is delayed, but exports are not affected.”

However, as In-Fa headed towards the city of Zhoushan, making landfall on Sunday, it prompted the closure of Shanghai’s air, sea and rail hubs just 150km north.

Reopen expected

According to CH Robinson, warehouses have also stopped container loading and deliveries to terminals.

The forwarder said: “Shanghai has been closed since Friday and port operations are expected to reopen tonight around 10 pm. Ningbo port was also closed on Friday, but terminals and depots are resuming this afternoon. We expect to see vessel berthing delays of four-to-six days at each port.”

Hundreds of flights from Shanghai and Ningbo have been canceled. CH Robinson said Ningbo International, Shanghai Pudong, and Shanghai Hongqiao were all closed yesterday.

“Charter flights for today have been canceled, while some freighters are resuming later today,” the company added.

Rail freight’s disrupted

According to Metro Shipping, there is a lot of cargo stuck at Pudong, and carriers are unlikely to recover flight schedules until Wednesday. The forwarder added: “Therefore, this week’s rates have increased greatly and, even worse, the available space is very little.”

On the land side, Norman Global Logistics (NGL) said road transport across the whole region had been affected by flooding and warned customers China-Europe rail freight was disrupted by the heavy rain in Henan.

“Cargo is being re-configured to other terminals in China, but we expect it to add more pressure on the service, which already has equipment shortages and limited space.”

Trains stopped

Shanghai-based Marco Reichel, APAC business development director at Crane Worldwide Logistics, said the typhoon had stopped trains running in Shanghai, as well as nearby Yiwu and Suzhou.

He told The Loadstar: “Rail, air, and ocean freight are all getting delayed again, which is something we definitely don’t need at the moment.”

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Source: TheLoadStar