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FEW SIGNS OF CONGESTION FROM BALTIMORE REROUTING AS RATES CONTINUE TO EASE
April 10, 2024

A few weeks after the Baltimore bridge incident, a new analysis by Freightos found that there have been "no significant reports" of regional road or port congestion as a result of the vessel rerouting to other ports on the East Coast.

 

Judah Levine, head of research at Freightos, said East Coast ocean freight rates have decreased since the port closure in Baltimore, likewise suggesting that regional container traffic has continued to flow.

 

"Despite the Baltimore event, the broader drivers in ocean freight — easing demand as container trade is in its slow season and stabilized operations for Red Sea diversions — have continued to ease pressure on freight rates," Levine added, noting that prices will, however, remain above normal as long as the Red Sea threat persists, and Houthi attacks continue, with the group again threatening to expand their range.

 

"As a military solution to the attacks has proved elusive, the US envoy to Yemen is also exploring diplomatic incentives to bring the disruption to an end," he said.

 

Meanwhile, recovery efforts in Baltimore continued to make progress. Crews began the on-water removal of containers from the still-stuck Dali, a necessary step in clearing the ship from the collision site.

 

In addition to three temporary, shallow channels already enabling some vessels to access the port, a 35-foot deep channel that will be able to handle some Ro-Ro vessels as well as barges to shuttle some limited container volumes from Norfolk is expected to open by the end of April.

 

"The Army Corp of Engineers now projects that full access to the Port of Baltimore can be restored by the end of May," Freightos said in the report.

 

In the meantime, it added that Baltimore-bound containers are being rerouted to other East Coast ports, with about 80% of these being handled at either Norfolk or New York/New Jersey.

 

New rail services are also already moving containers between the ports of Baltimore and NY/NJ to assist shippers disrupted by the closure.

 

For the period, Freightos noted that ocean rates from Asia to N. America has decreased by more than 30% from their February peaks, and to N. Europe and the Mediterranean, prices have fallen by 25% since January but remain about double their levels in 2019.

 

The report added, "Rates are now in the US$3,000 - US$4,000/FEU range for these lanes, which, recent April rate announcements suggest, is the carriers' hoped-for floor as long as diversions continue to increase their costs and soak up capacity."

 

It further said that though low-water measures in Panama did not prove "terribly disruptive" to container traffic, the easing of Panama Canal transit restrictions as the region enters the long-awaited rainy season is nonetheless welcomed news in the industry and has led Maersk to restore one of its services that had stopped using the canal.

 

In air cargo, Red Sea-driven disruptions to ocean freight are still pushing some volumes to the air out of India, though Freightos noted that "demand is easing somewhat."

 

Freightos Air Index rates out of S. Asia continued to climb through last week.

 

Prices to N. America has increased 95% since mid-December to US$5.40/kg, which is the highest level since late 2022 for this lane, and in Europe, rates have climbed 122% to US$3.87/kg.

 

Freightos noted that rates out of sea-air hubs in the Middle East also continued to climb into April due to Red Sea diversions and are up to US$3.47/kg to N. America and US$1.81/kg to N. Europe, which are respectively 12% and 24% higher than at the start of the Red Sea crisis.

 

"Another driver of improved air cargo volumes is a growing demand for B2C eCommerce out of China."

It added that online retailers like Temu and Shein are increasingly buying up air cargo space to the West, and though China rates to N. America and N. Europe have declined in recent weeks, at US$3.66/kg and US$3.36/kg, respectively, prices remain well above typical levels for non-peak periods.

 

"One factor that will increase China-US air capacity and could ease some pressure on rates is the recent loosening of US restrictions on the number of weekly flights to the US allotted to Chinese carriers," Levine said.

 

He noted that weekly flights increased from 35 to 50 for April but remained a third of pre-pandemic levels.

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