Three challenges facing fresh cargo in the tariff era
This year has been marked by talk about tariffs on imports entering the United States and their repercussions for producers, exporters, and consumers. Continuing this trend, last week, the Journal of Commerce hosted a webinar to analyze the impact of tariffs on the shipping of fresh produce and frozen foods worldwide.
Thomas Eskesen, CEO and founder of Eskesen Advisory, and Bruce Marshall, Head of Reefer Solutions at A.P. Moller-Maersk, were invited by the publication to break down the subject.
During the discussion, the shipping experts identified three challenges for refrigerated cargo and expressed their concern over the short-term uncertainty that the American policy brings to the global landscape.
#1āTariffs are changing sourcing throughout the supply chain
Sounds simple, but the U.S. imposing a 30 percent tariff on South African imports is not the same as finding out your favorite coffee shop is raising prices. In the latter example, the problem might be solved by walking an extra block to get your morning cup of joe. In the former, finding a new supplier is much more difficult.
āWe thought we were sitting in a 10 percent range, but now weāre seeing a much bigger variation,ā says Eskesen, head of Eskesen Advisory, a Danish consultancy company specializing in refrigerated transport. āI think it has the potential to change sourcing, for sure.ā
Seeing this from a U.S. importerās point of view, he says, managing supply has become exceedingly more complex than it was before. Eskesen explains that retailers and importers are not only accustomed to dealing with certain suppliers but, in some cases, have also invested in adapting their infrastructure and processes to work more easily with them.
For those companies, change is not easy or inexpensive, and things get even more complicated when you factor in the volatility, as the White House announces new and higher tariffs on top of existing ones. On the fruit and vegetable side, the situation is even more dire, as producers also have to deal with seasonality.
āIf youāre in the U.S. and youāre a consumer, I would be exceedingly worried, because this is going to cause food inflation,ā Eskesen says.
#2 āFinding new markets
It might be easy for your neighborhood coffee shop to make up for the clients it lost by luring in new ones. But when your client is the largest economy in the world, things are not as easy, especially in the short term. Eskesen explains that itās almost too late in the year for exporters to find new markets, as a change in destination for goods requires a lot of planning.
Mainly, new markets mean new routes, which entail a new logistics approach to deliver a product to its final destination. Longer routes can also require more capacity, and finding enough ships in a time marked by global congestion in several key ports around the world can be tricky, to say the least. Add to that the need for reefer shipsāas is the case for fresh produce and frozen foodsāand you have an even more complex scenario.
āFor the next season, itāll stabilize, itāll find new marketsābut itās not going to be that easy,ā Eskesen says.
The complexity of it all seems to have actors all along the supply chain in a standstill. Bruce Marshall, Head of Reefer Solutions at A.P. Moller-Maersk, says heās yet to see changes in shipping patterns or cargo flows, and this may be evidence against the argument that itās foreign economiesānot American consumersāwho will be footing the tariff bill.
āShippers to the U.S. are very clear in saying āConsumers are going to pay for thisāwe are not going to pay for thisā,ā he says. āI can acknowledge that coming through in a lot of our customer conversations.ā
The expert at Moller-Maersk explains this is what will happen in the short term, and if suppliers ācanāt pass the cost along the value chain, then theyāre going to look for different markets.ā
However, that will take time, as global trade will need to readjust and find a new balance that makes sense for producers, exporters, importers, and, ultimately, the final consumer. That, says Marshall, will only happen in the medium to long term.
If the finding of new markets is resolved by next season, Marshall says itāll all come down to shipment availability (having enough of the right ships) as well as containers. But then thereās another situation to tackle.
āAt some point shipping may become easier, but if it remains restricted or constricted as it is now, then opening a new trade level itās not an easy discussion,ā he explains.
#3āUncertainty in the short term
With new tariffs and extensions announcements, as well as ongoing negotiations and deadlines coming to an end, thereās little left to do but to take a wait-and-see approach.
āCustomers are not sure what to do because itās been changing quite frequently,ā says Marshall.
The expert explains that there are several limitations to changing markets and suppliers overnight. Things like packaging that has already been printed for a location, or produce that has been grown with a certain chemical thatās accepted in one market but not another, further complicate a quick pivot.
āItās not just as easy as āLetās decide tomorrow if weāre going to ship to that locationāāitās a planned environment,ā he says.
For Eskesen, the fact that thereās no blanket tariff but different rates for different countries, depending not only on trade deficits but also on political reasons, adds to the overall complexity of the situation.
āAs an independent, I really donāt think itās going to make America great again, because, all of a sudden, youāre going to have the climate to make your own bananas? I donāt think so,ā he says.
As other analysts have pointed out, Eskesen explains that American consumers have so far been spared the larger impact of the trade war, as U.S. importers filled warehouses with products ahead of the tariffs going into effect.
āI suspect that when food inflation starts to really hit people at the register, there will be some voices saying, āWait a minute, why are we actually slapping specific tariffs on things that we need as American consumers and that weāll never be able to produce?ā,ā he says. āSo maybe there will be a correctionāand then weāll have to deal with that.ā
* All images are referential
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