World News | Logjam at Busiest UK Commercial Port Adds to Christmas Fears

Get latest articles and stories on World at LatestLY. A logjam at the UK's busiest commercial port ratcheted up concerns Wednesday that the country could see shortages during the crucial Christmas holiday period, including of toys and food.

London, Oct 13 (AP) A logjam at the UK's busiest commercial port ratcheted up concerns Wednesday that the country could see shortages during the crucial Christmas holiday period, including of toys and food.

Worries have mounted over recent weeks that the UK's economic recovery is being hobbled by widespread shortages, which have been most clearly seen in long lines at gas stations and some empty shelves at supermarkets.

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The disruption is clearly visible at the east England port of Felixstowe, the UK's largest commercial port. A bottleneck of containers at the port, which deals with 36 per cent of UK freight container volumes, has been blamed on a shortage of drivers.

The buildup of cargo has prompted shipping company Maersk to divert some of its biggest vessels away from UK ports to others in Europe, where it uses smaller vessels to get the deliveries to the UK.

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“With Felixstowe handling almost 40 per cent of all the containers coming to and from the UK, this adds yet more imbalance to Britain's supply chain, especially in the current peak consumer period we are entering ahead of Christmas," said Alex Hersham, chief executive of London-based digital freight forwarding company Zencargo.

“It is essential that retailers and consumers prepare for an extended disruption to the supply chain and plan for what will be a Christmas heavily impacted by these issues,” he added.

While other countries around the world have seen similar disruptions, Britain is facing particularly acute problems due to a shortage of truck drivers.

The causes are widespread, but it's clear that the combination of Britain's departure from the European Union and the coronavirus pandemic prompted many EU workers to leave the UK and head home.

Andrew Opie, director of food and sustainability at the British Retail Consortium, said the congestion at Felixstowe was “yet another unwanted side-effect” of the driver shortage and that “further disruption may be unavoidable."

Britain's Conservative government has sought to temper fears there will be a shortage of many goods at Christmas.

The government says it is accelerating efforts to train more homegrown truck drivers and is offering a few thousand short-term visas to foreign drivers, though few appear to have taken the offer because the visas only last for a few months.

“Extending the temporary visa scheme to increase the pool of drivers available would provide a short-term fix to these problems, and the government must act quickly to prevent further disruption for consumers in the months ahead," the British Retail Consortium's Opie said.

The shortages of products and drivers are coming at a time when the UK's economic recovery is already losing momentum as a result of the supply chain issues.

The Office of National Statistics said the economy eked out growth of 0.4 per cent in August as bars, restaurants and festivals benefited from the first full month without coronavirus restrictions in England, but the increase was slightly lower than anticipated. The agency also revised down July's figure from 0.1 per cent growth to a 0.1 per cent decline as a result of weaker data from a number of industries.

Earlier this year, there were expectations that the British economy would recover all its COVID-19-related losses by the end of 2021, but that is now in question. As of the end of August, the British economy remained 0.8 per cent below its pre-pandemic level from February 2020.

Also set to weigh on growth during coming months are rising inflation, low productivity levels, higher taxes and an uncertain COVID-19 backdrop.

The International Monetary Fund forecast Tuesday that the UK will grow by 6.8 per cent this year, more than any other Group of Seven industrial nation, and by a still-high 5 per cent next year. However, the British economy experienced the worst recession out of all G-7 members in 2020, contracting by 9.8 per cent. (AP)

(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)

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