Let's be clear... the bottleneck is EMPTY containers taking up room on chassis and spilling over into container warehouses, docks, etc. This is clogging up the system and creating situations where multiple movements of both empty and full containers beyond the normal efficient "just-in-time" movement cannot take place.
To keep the goods moving, more containers are being built and a premium is being placed on empty containers. Just as the goods traffic is snarled, so are the return of empty containers. This is why the major rails shut down for one week in July and have since started metering to their midwestern hubs. For every chassis laden with goods inbound to that midwestern hub, the port must take one chassis laden with either an empty container or outbound goods. Here's a sampling from Freightwaves.
Until such time as the hubs in middle America are "un" choked, the ports will remain congested. And yes, there are driver shortages throughout the system. Truckinginfo.
It was nice optics to have some politico state the ports were now going to function 24/7 and then get 24/7 news coverage of the statement, but saying that and doing that are very different things. Where is the in-depth coverage and follow-up?
COP26
A meeting in Glasgow is to begin soon, to discuss ways to reduce carbon emissions and achieve some targets. A noble cause and more power to them BUT... apparently China and India can't even supply the expected paperwork AND at least one of their leaders is simply skipping the conference.
The current goals are cutting emissions in half by 2030 and net zero by 2050. Considering China and India are nearly one half of current emissions... it would require the rest of the world to be net zero right now. As both China and India are having difficulty finding enough coal to currently generate electricity and driving prices of coal upwards... if they were the only emitters, that 2030 goal is toast, imo.
This is no reason to give up on emissions reduction, but realism needs to be on the table. It is certainly admirable to hope for the best but... we need to prepare for the worst as well.
It should be noted Jaguar Land Rover is furnishing 240 electric vehicles to transport these folks around. However, there is likely not enough recharging capacity available, so Diesel generators will be used to re-charge. But this is not going to be that dirty oil, but HVO (hydrogenated vegetable oil). The type in fryers. Presumably this makes everything alright... even these vegetable oils were grown and harvested with old fashioned diesel vehicles. Or maybe all farm vehicles in the U.K. are now electric. /s
Oh, and before I forget, this from Deutsche Welle - UN says national climate targets 'fall far short'. So the even promises are not making the grade and we should recognize that promises often fall short of expectations.
Note: Article written on 10-16-2021 and links may no longer be viable OR behind a paywall.
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