Baltimore Bridge Collapse Impacts US Supply Chains

MIchael Snyder

When I awoke early on Tuesday morning, I was stunned to learn that the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore had collapsed.  We are being told that it was a tragic “accident” and that there is no evidence that any foul play was involved.  Hopefully that is true.  But no matter how it was caused, this tragedy is going to have an enormous impact on U.S. supply chains.  And of course this comes at a really bad time, because Houthi missile strikes in the Red Sea and low water levels in the Panama Canal have been putting a tremendous amount of strain on global supply chains recently.

According to Bloomberg, it appears that the Port of Baltimore will be “out of commission indefinitely”

The Port of Baltimore — the biggest handler of US imports and exports of cars and light trucks — looks to be out of commission indefinitely. The resulting bottleneck could accelerate a shift of goods through West Coast ports. Another crucial question: Which other ports have spare capacity to handle the Ro-Ro vessels that carry automobiles if Baltimore is closed for an extended period.

This is a really big deal, because over 750,000 vehicles came through that port last year alone…

The port is the busiest in the U.S. for car shipments, handling more than 750,000 vehicles in 2023, according to data from the Maryland Port Administration. It is also the largest U.S. port by volume for handling farm and construction machinery, as well as agricultural products.

In addition, a whole host of prominent retailers are very dependent on the Port of Baltimore…

Retailers like Home Depot, Bob’s Furniture, IKEA, and Amazon are just some of the companies that use the port to import goods. Other top imports include sugar and gypsum.

“This will have an impact for trade all along the East Coast and it will continue until we know how quickly” the port can reopen, said Richard Meade, editor-in-chief of the shipping journal Lloyd’s List.

Vessels were already being diverted to New York and down to Virginia on Tuesday, said Meade. “There will be dozens of diversions in the next week and hundreds in the coming months as long as Baltimore is shut down.”

This isn’t the end of the world, and shipments can certainly be diverted to other ports.

But we are talking about the 11th largest port in the entire nation, and so this will definitely be a serious blow

More than 52 million tons of foreign cargo, worth some $80 billion were transported out of the port last year, according to Maryland Gov. Wes Moore. The 11th largest port in the nation, Baltimore served an average of 207 calls a month last year, according to the shipping journal Lloyd’s List.

In addition, it is going to take a very long time for the Francis Scott Key Bridge to be rebuilt.

As Lara Logan has pointed out, that section of I-695 was the “second busiest strategic roadway in the nation for hazardous material”…

Second busiest strategic roadway in the nation for hazardous material now down for 4-5 years – which is how long they say it will take to recover. Bridge was built specifically to move hazardous material – fuel, diesel, propane gas, nitrogen, highly flammable materials, chemicals and oversized cargo that cannot fit in the tunnels – that supply chain now crippled.

One expert is projecting that it will take more than two years to rebuild the bridge…

While trade is nimble and will reroute, over the long term the bridge will need to be fundamentally engineered and rebuilt, and that will take years.

“It will be in excess of two years,” said Meade, of Lloyd’s List. “There will be significant disruption and cost to this infrastructure project. In 1977, the bridge cost $60 million. Take in inflation and the rapid pace to redesign and build will increase procurement premiums. This will be a very expensive project.”

I would be shocked if it happens that quickly.

We shall see.

In any event, we are talking about a multi-faceted crisis that is going to be affecting U.S. supply chains for the foreseeable future.

At a press conference following the collapse of the bridge, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg openly admitted that we are looking at a “major and protracted impact on supply chains”

“There is no question this will be a major and protracted impact on supply chains,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said during a Tuesday afternoon press conference in Baltimore.

I think that this is the first time I have ever agreed with Pete Buttigieg on anything.

Sadly, this is just the beginning.

In the months ahead, U.S. supply chains will be hit with additional challenges.

So if there are things that you are planning to purchase, I would do that now.

Before I end this article, there is one more thing that I wanted to mention.

Global supplies of cocoa just keep getting tighter and tighter, and on Tuesday the price of cocoa jumped above $10,000 per metric ton for the first time ever

Cocoa prices hit a record Tuesday as supply constraints fuel prices higher.

Futures for May delivery were up 3.9% at $10,030 per metric ton, marking the first time the commodity breaks above the $10,000 mark. Cocoa has been on a tear this year, soaring nearly 138%.

Difficult weather conditions and disease have affected production in West Africa, which produces about 70% of the world’s cocoa. The two largest producers, Ivory Coast and Ghana, have been hit by a combination of heavy rain, dry heat and disease recently.

In January, it was less than half that price.

If you love chocolate, stock up on it while you still can.

Of course the same thing could be said about countless other things.

Do you remember the supply chain problems that we experienced a couple of years ago?

Well, what is eventually coming is going to absolutely dwarf that.

Many are using the term “black swan event” to describe the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, but the truth is that we are moving into a time when there will be one “black swan event” after another.

So get prepared while there is still an opportunity to do so, because the months and years ahead of us are going to be extremely chaotic.

[…]

Via https://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/the-baltimore-bridge-collapse-is-going-to-have-an-enormous-impact-on-u-s-supply-chains/

8 thoughts on “Baltimore Bridge Collapse Impacts US Supply Chains

  1. Things were chaotic before the bridge was collapsed, and they are already telling people to stock up on whatever it is they think they need. What won’t be said is how America doesn’t make shit anymore and must rely on products to be shipped when incidences of this type could become fairly common. What’s the point in stocking up on junk and bioengineered toxins masquerading as food? The mess that some people are prepping, will kill them before a damn nuclear mushroom cloud would. And the reason why there as so many thrift stores around is due to the fact that Americans overbuy, CONSTANTLY! What need have they to keep buying and hoarding? I no longer despair FOR US; I despair OF US!

    Liked by 2 people

    • My needs are minimal, but my Tweety Pie likes her chocolate chips. She’s just getting over illness, due to weather stress and my de-cluttering project, but as you so often note, the homeless in the US of A don’t have room to “stock up”.

      Liked by 2 people

    • American doesn’t make shit anymore, Shelby. I think you put your finger on it. I’ve now come to believe that it’s impossible to provide a living wage (ie one the covers the cost of accommodation) without good paying manufacturing jobs. The ruling elite made that impossible in the 1970s when they decided to export our manufacturing jobs to Asia and based the US economy on banking, insurance, real estate speculation, weapons manufacture and illicit drugs. I now think many of them knew (or should have known) what would happen. I have recently learned that Lincoln made a deliberate decision to build a transcontinental railroad because he knew it would stimulate trade and manufacturing to help industrialize the South. If they people who assassinated him hadn’t blocked Reconstruction and industrialization of the South, Jim Crow would never have happened.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Couldn’t have said it better.

        First bridge collapse no accident.

        Second bridge collapse no accident.

        odds on the third?

        I’ve seen large ships run into bridges. Didn’t look likw pics they are showing

        Like

      • There’s more to that story, as always. Lincoln was a corporate railroad attorney before his election, and was beholden to the railroad interests. The south seceded because of Lincoln’s position on unequal tariffs, because the south was producing the cotton, corn, and other foodstuffs that the manufacturing North depended on to manufacture finished goods.

        Like

  2. I live approximately 600 miles south of Baltimore and Washington D.C. along the I-95 interstate. I’ve driven up and down portions of the interstate multiple times in the past, including to New York City, where I lived after college in North Carolina, so I have known that route well, in the 1970s.

    The Baltimore bridge collapse last week interests several people I know, for various reasons, because everyone has theories about what happened and why. My old road atlases, Google searches, and YouTube news only provide bits and pieces, but this article tells me a lot. Thanks.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Pingback: Baltimore Bridge Collapse Impacts US Supply Chains | Worldtruth

Leave a reply to katharineotto Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.