Maritime and Logistics News
  • Maritime & Ocean News
    • Container Shipping News
    • Dry Bulk Shipping News
    • Breakbulk Shipping News
    • Chemical Shipping News
    • Crude Oil Shipping News
    • Cruise Shipping News
    • Fishing News
    • Freight Forwarders News
    • LNG & LPG Shipping News
    • Multimodal Transport News
    • Railway News
    • Straits News
    • Trucking News
  • Global Ports News
    • Port Accidents News
    • Port Congestion News
    • Port Infrastructure News
    • Port Strike News
    • Schedules News
  • Air Cargo News
    • Air Cargo Carriers News
    • Air Freight Forwarder News
    • Airports News
  • Logistics News
    • Supply Chain News
    • Warehousing News
    • Cold Storage News
    • Logistics Parks News
  • Vessels News
    • Bunkering News
    • Incidents News
    • Offshore News
    • Pilotage News
    • Piracy News
    • Services News
    • Ship Breaking News
    • Shipbuilding News
  • Tech. & Sustainability News
    • Green Logistics News
    • Responsibility Projects News
    • Useful Maritime Associations News
  • English
    • English
    • Deutsch
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Advertisement
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Maritime & Logistics News

Shippers to Shift to West Coast and Air Freight Solutions Amid Ongoing ILA Strike

October 2, 2024
in Maritime & Logistics News
Shippers to Shift to West Coast and Air Freight Solutions Amid Ongoing ILA Strike
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The long-anticipated ILA port worker union strike across US East Coast and Gulf ports began Monday night at 12:01 am after the ILA and USMX failed to come to an agreement before the deadline.

In the last few days, the White House and other government officials had been urging both sides to return to the negotiating table, with USMX leadership reportedly meeting with the Biden administration late last week.

The USMX made a last-minute 50% wage increase offer, which the ILA rejected as the union reportedly seeks a 77% increase. The USMX filed an unfair labour practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board against the ILA last week, which, if accepted, would force the ILA back to the negotiating table. However, the approval process could take several weeks.

In the last days before the strike logistics providers were hastening steps to minimize the impact of a strike as much as possible. Trucking firms were working to pull containers out of impacted ports before the shutdown. Carriers including ONE, Hapag-Lloyd, and MSC had some vessels omit East Coast port calls scheduled too close to the strike deadline, instead offloading all imports at other East Coast stops or in Mexico or Canada, though so far there haven’t been reports of outright diversions to unscheduled East Coast alternatives or the West Coast.

Some carriers have stopped accepting new reefer bookings for the East Coast and many are rolling out significant surcharges for new dry container bookings in October, which are likely to push East Coast rates up even while the ports are closed. Several carriers have announced they will stop the clock on detention and demurrage charges for containers stuck on container yards during the strike, with the FMC also warning against unfair D+D charges.

Though container and intermodal capacity limits at alternative ports in Mexico and Canada do not make them viable options for a full-scale shift of impacted volumes, a three-day labor strike at two of the Port of Montreal’s five container terminals, is not helping matters either.

It remains to be seen if the ILA will implement a sustained wide scale strike or some alternative – like strikes only at some key ports, only on certain days, or a slow down of operations at some or all ports – instead. Some observers think that due to the economic implications of a prolonged full-scale strike and the political pressure it would place on the Biden administration, the ILA may prefer more limited actions and reduce the likelihood of government intervention.

In any case, there are reportedly about 40 vessels slated to arrive just at the Port of New York/New Jersey this week, and the large majority will likely arrive and wait if the ports are shut down. Congestion and backlogs from a strike will cause delays for shippers with containers at the ports or on those or additional arriving vessels and – as already reflected in carrier surcharges – will push freight rates up.

Demand has already shifted somewhat to the West Coast in the last few months, and a prolonged shutdown will intensify that trend. Demand increases or actual diverted vessels to the West Coast will likely push rates up there as well despite a projected overall decrease in import container volumes to the US in October.

The Ports of LA/Long Beach, as well as ports in the Pacific Northwest, report fluid operations and preparedness for a sudden increase in volumes. But a prolonged strike and a significant shift of demand and port calls to the West Coast could eventually overwhelm the ports and lead to congestion that would further slow down operations, tie up capacity and push rates up.

A long-enough strike on the East Coast would eventually be felt in capacity and empty container shortages in Europe, and significant enough congestion on the West Coast could likewise impact equipment availability at Asian origin hubs, affecting intra-Asia and Asia – Europe shipping as well.

The anticipation of the strike has already pushed some shippers, especially of perishable goods, from ocean to air cargo. Freightos Air Index data for Latin America – N. America and N. America – Europe rates don’t reflect an uptick in air cargo prices yet, though Europe – N. America rates have increased 4% to US$1.73/kg since early September.

China – N. America air rates increased 9% last week to US$5.91/kg. This climb could reflect the beginning of air peak season, with prices already above typical peak season levels from the ongoing surge of e-commerce volumes. Though hubs in China are not reporting operational slow downs yet, some congestion is forming in Singapore and Vietnam, with the Philippines experiencing severe backlogs.


This article was written by Judah Levine, Head of Research at Freightos

Tags: AndForPortStrikeThe

Related Posts

Demurrage dilemma: court overturns FMC’s trucking rule 
Air Cargo Carriers News

Demurrage dilemma: court overturns FMC’s trucking rule 

October 6, 2025
Truckload leader Ward stepping down; successor search begins
Air Cargo Carriers News

Truckload leader Ward stepping down; successor search begins

October 3, 2025
Senate confirms Derek Barrs as FMCSA chief
Air Cargo Carriers News

Senate confirms Derek Barrs as FMCSA chief

October 3, 2025
90 million sensors: Walmart’s bold move in logistics
Air Cargo Carriers News

90 million sensors: Walmart’s bold move in logistics

October 3, 2025
Trucking industry facing ‘horrible’ rates, tariffs, Werner CEO says
Air Cargo Carriers News

Trucking industry facing ‘horrible’ rates, tariffs, Werner CEO says

October 3, 2025
WEX OTR Summit unveils digital fueling tools and AI-driven vision
Air Cargo Carriers News

WEX OTR Summit unveils digital fueling tools and AI-driven vision

October 2, 2025
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

November 19, 2024
FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

August 21, 2025
Vintage VLCC prices firm up

Vintage VLCC prices firm up

February 25, 2025
At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

November 18, 2024
PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse,

PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse

0
Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

0
Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

0
Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

0

Hamad Port emerges as winner in Middle East shipping upheaval

October 7, 2025
Gaza plan to boost Suez shipping recovery in 2025

Gaza plan to boost Suez shipping recovery in 2025

October 7, 2025
AI surge fuels logistics transformation as Coupa buys Scoutbee

AI surge fuels logistics transformation as Coupa buys Scoutbee

October 7, 2025
Goltens and IPCO Power partner on fuel efficiency solutions

Goltens and IPCO Power partner on fuel efficiency solutions

October 7, 2025

Recent News

Hamad Port emerges as winner in Middle East shipping upheaval

October 7, 2025
Gaza plan to boost Suez shipping recovery in 2025

Gaza plan to boost Suez shipping recovery in 2025

October 7, 2025
AI surge fuels logistics transformation as Coupa buys Scoutbee

AI surge fuels logistics transformation as Coupa buys Scoutbee

October 7, 2025
Goltens and IPCO Power partner on fuel efficiency solutions

Goltens and IPCO Power partner on fuel efficiency solutions

October 7, 2025

Stay ahead in the dynamic world of maritime and logistics with our comprehensive news coverage. Explore the latest industry trends, breaking news, and insightful analyses. Your gateway to informed decision-making in shipping, trade, and logistics awaits.

Follow Us

Our Partners

shipstrack.com
E-tracking
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.

No Result
View All Result

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.