Hong Kong food supply at risk again as more drivers get Covid

Published Fri, Feb 11, 2022 · 06:48 AM

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    [HONG KONG] More truck drivers responsible for transporting food supplies into Hong Kong have tested positive for coronavirus at the mainland China border, sparking concerns that the city may be hit by another round of fresh-food shortages.

    Nine cross-border drivers have tested positive since Feb 4, including two on Thursday, according to a statement by border control authorities in the mainland city of Shenzhen. All places visited by the two drivers were disinfected and the local government has informed Hong Kong about the cases, it said.

    While the latest infections haven't affected supplies so far, Hong Kong has only just recovered from this week's sudden shortage of vegetables after mainland China temporarily shut border-crossing operations following a handful of positive tests among truck drivers.

    Last weekend's swift crackdown - typical of the rigid measures the mainland imposes to quash potential outbreaks - saw supermarket shelves stripped bare and prices surge as fresh-produce supply dropped as much as 70 per cent.

    The latest two cases didn't use the border crossing designated for fresh food transport, according to Thomas Ng, chairman of Hong Kong Food Council and a fresh produce supplier.

    But the logistics industry fears China may step up virus control measures to prevent infections from Hong Kong, which is reporting record daily case numbers, from spilling over, said Chan Fu-chuen, vice chairman of the Chamber of Hong Kong Logistics Industry. That would make border checkpoints more congested and affect the supply chain, he said.

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    Hong Kong relies on mainland China for more than 90 per cent of its vegetables and fresh-water fish, and imports a range of other goods from construction materials to home appliances. Vegetable supply had returned to 90 per cent of normal and was expected to further stabilise, the government said Thursday. Operations at border control points were smooth and supplies of chilled pork, poultry and eggs remained steady, it said. A government representative didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday.

    Still, a sense of caution remains as Hong Kong battles an unprecedented virus outbreak that's set to see a record of more than 1,320 new cases reported on Friday and has prompted officials to seek help from mainland China. Both places are the last global holdouts pursing a Covid Zero strategy.

    Some mainland factories have rejected Hong Kong drivers from entering facilities, fearing a potential infection may lead to shutdown of their operations, according to Chan.

    "The situation is very bad," he said. "If more infections are found among drivers, Shenzhen may further tighten control measures and the worst may be yet to come." BLOOMBERG

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