Dockworker shortage shuts California ports

Published Sat, Apr 8, 2023 · 08:01 AM
    • The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach – known as the San Pedro Bay Port Complex – move around 20 million shipping containers’ worth of goods every year, with a value of over US$300 billion.
    • The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach – known as the San Pedro Bay Port Complex – move around 20 million shipping containers’ worth of goods every year, with a value of over US$300 billion. PHOTO: AFP

    TWO of the busiest ports in the United States were shuttered on Friday because not enough dockworkers turned up for work, a shippers representative said.

    The shutdown comes as part of a long-rumbling dispute between shippers and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) focused on pay and the role of automation.

    “The largest ILWU local on the West Coast has taken a concerted action to withhold labour at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, resulting in widespread worker shortages,” said a statement from the Pacific Maritime Association, the umbrella group that represents shippers.

    “The workers who did show up were released because there was not a full complement of ILWU members to operate the terminals.

    “The action by the Union has effectively shut down the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach – the largest gateway for maritime trade in the United States.” The ILWU insisted the only no-shows were those marking the Christian festival of Good Friday.

    “Cargo operations are ongoing as longshore workers at the Ports remain on the job,” a union statement said.

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    The two ports – known as the San Pedro Bay Port Complex – move around 20 million shipping containers’ worth of goods every year, with a value of over US$300 billion.

    The complex is the ninth biggest port in the world by market share, port figures show, and plays a key role in keeping global supply chains moving.

    During the Covid-19 pandemic, ports around the globe gummed up, as shippers struggled to meet demand for stay-at-home goods, a problem that persisted as countries opened up.

    Economists said the slow-to-shift backlog was a contributing factor in the inflation that has gripped much of the world in the last 18 months as consumers demand products that aren’t arriving fast enough. AFP

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