First CCP Virus Outbreak on International Container Ship Loading in China

First CCP Virus Outbreak on International Container Ship Loading in China

News Analysis The worlds largest container ship operator announced that crew members on one of its ..

News Analysis

The worlds largest container ship operator announced that crew members on one of its large vessels loading cargo at a major Chinese port tested positive for the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus.

AMP-Maersk confirmed on March 26 that seven crew members onboard its Gjertrud Maersk docked at Chinas Ningbo port were evacuated to a local hospital. Five seafarers tested positive for CCP virus, with four infected but still asymptomatic. The ship is now quarantined in the harbor.

The Danish flagged conglomerate moves an average of 12 million containers, with 768 vessels through 300 ports in 130 countries each year. Maersk has 79,900 employees across the globe, but only about ten percent of the headcount are seafarers.

In addition to factory lockdowns in China slowing demand, major ports around the world have been imposing up to two-week quarantines for arriving containerships to try to restrict the importation of the CCP virus.

The delays have contributed to the top U.S. ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach reporting a steep drop in container volumes. Total TEU (twenty-foot equivalent unit) volumes in February fell by nearly 23 percent in the port of Los Angeles, and dropped by 10 percent in the port of Long Beach compared to the same month last year, according to The Maritime Executive.

But with Chinas economy and its ports slowly coming back online, the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) and the International Association of Ports and Harbors (IAPH) jointly called on the Group of 20 major economies on March 24 to end the delays, and to allow merchant shipping to keep flowing.

ICS secretary general Guy Platten urged classifying ship crews as key workers: “Ensuring that seafarers can travel without undue restriction will be key to maintaining the flow of food, medicine and key commodities to those countries that need it most.”

ICS represents 80 percent of the global merchant fleet.

With the International Monetary Fund expecting the CCP virus to trigger a global recession, G20 finance ministers and central bankers had voiced support during video conferences for an “action plan” to limit job and income losses from the pandemic, while working to ease supply disruptions caused by border closures, Read More – Source

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