Posts Tagged “dockworkers strike”
(Since this article was written the U.S. dockworkers and the U.S. Maritime Alliance, effective the evening of October 3, have extended their existing contract through January 15. This will provide time to negotiate a new contract.)
The Food Industry Association of Arlington, VA and its President and CEO Leslie G. Sarasin offered the following statement on the East and Gulf Coasts ports strike by the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA):
“There’s never a good time for a strike. Now, the current strike is compounding the horrific situation in the Southeastern United States resulting from Hurricane Helene and parties need to return to the negotiating table.
“We must be focused on helping the communities and people devastated by Hurricane Helene. The strike on the East and Gulf Coasts by the International Longshoremen’s Association threatens to make the situation even more dire. This action has already begun to jeopardize food supply chain operations, and the strike has the potential to disrupt the long-term stability of markets and commodities, namely pharmaceuticals, seafood, produce, meat, cheese, ingredients, and packaging.
“An extended strike will likely cause dramatic increases in the cost and availability of goods, intensifying this inflationary environment. And, unfortunately, this situation cannot be addressed by a switch to alternative ports due to the freight costs and time associated with transporting products back to the East Coast.
“Compounding the implications of this strike, we are facing a humanitarian crisis of extraordinary proportions. Hurricane Helene’s aftermath in communities across North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida and South Carolina have left tremendous flooding and washed-out roads, destruction of neighborhoods, no power, and no potable water. Many of our food retail and product supplier members are trying desperately to ensure their associates’ safety and get their businesses back online to serve these devastated communities and support their own employees who have been displaced.
“We urge the negotiating parties to come to a swift resolution as we all focus on assisting these devastated communities.”
Chilean Fruit Growers Concerned
Chilean fruit growers are expressing concern about potential harm to trade because of the port strike on the East Coast of the U.S.
The International Longshoremen’s Association began the strike Oct. 1 against the United States Maritime Alliance.
The port strike will directly affect shipments of Chilean fruit to the North America, said the Chilean grower group Federation of Fruit Producers of Chile, or Fedefruta.
“We find it regrettable that port operations are paralyzed, and at the same time we call on the parties to reconcile, agree and resolve their differences so that ports in the U.S. can continue to function,” Víctor Catán, president of Fedefruta, said in a statement. “We believe that tremendous damage is done to the U.S. population that is deprived of goods and food, in our case making it impossible to enter the entry of top quality fruits that supply the different supermarkets in that country.”
In 2023, Chile exporters shipped more than $1 billion of fresh fruit to the Philadelphia port alone, according to USDA statistics. That represents 56% of total Chilean fruit exports to the U.S. in 2023 of $1.78 billion, the USDA said.
While the period from January through April represents the peak window for Chilean fresh fruit shipments to the U.S., imports from Chile occur in every month of the year. Last year the U.S. imported $134 million of Chilean fruit in October, or about 8% of the total 2023 value of Chilean fruit imports.