Shenzhen lockdowns to further shock supply chains

Joe Rinehart Agency • Mar 23, 2022

Colin Campbell |Reporter


Shenzhen lockdowns to further shock supply chains

Dive Brief:

  • Eleven districts in Shenzhen, China, are on lockdown, with local officials restricting movement for more than 17 million residents amid a surge of COVID-19 cases, according to various media outlets.
  • The lockdowns will affect supply chains, as many companies rely on the port city as a major manufacturing, tech and logistics hub. Some manufacturers have already suspended operations.
  • The restrictions could further increase international freight rates and shipping container prices, which were already at record highs, Johannes Schlingmeier, co-founder and CEO of Container xChange, said in an emailed statement.

Dive Insight:

The lockdowns will be "nothing less than a major shockwave" to supply chains already straining to meet demand, Schlingmeier said. Their effects will combine with the closure of the Asia-European railway, which accounts for about 2.5% of Asia-Europe cargo, expected to push high-value cargo to a low-capacity ocean freight market.


Shenzhen's port handled 26.55 million TEUs of cargo in 2020, and the city does the country's second-most foreign trade by volume. The port saw an 8% drop in average container price in the past two weeks, but the lockdowns are expected to heavily restrict container movement, according to Container xChange.


"This will put more pressure on the already struggling supply chain," Schlingmeier said.


Shenzhen, in southern China, reported 86 new locally transmitted cases of COVID-19 on Monday, as a wave of infections spreads throughout the country. The new cases discovered in the "City of a Thousand Gardens" follow surges elsewhere in the country, including an outbreak in Shanghai of about 480 cases, most of them asymptomatic, earlier in the month.


Three criteria must be met for the lockdowns to be lifted, according to the Shenzhen city government:


  1. No new cases in a 14-day period;
  2. 14 days passing since the last close contact to COVID-19, or the close contact remaining under centralized quarantine for over four days with negative nucleic acid test results;
  3. All residents completing a negative round of nucleic acid testing in the two days before lockdown restrictions are lifted


Manufacturers are already reporting effects on their operations.



FoxConn Technology Group, an Apple supplier, suspended production at its factories in Shenzhen without a specific timeline for resumption, CNBC reported. More than 40 Taiwan-based makers of semiconductors and other electronic components said Monday they would temporarily close facilities in Shenzhen and nearby Dongguan, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Cargo theft
By Joe Rinehart Agency 26 Jan, 2023
Cargo theft recording firm CargoNet recorded 1,778 supply chain risk events across the United States and Canada in 2022, a 15% increase over 2021.
ACT Research: Spot rates
By Joe Rinehart Agency 18 Jan, 2023
COLUMBUS, Ind. — Truckload spot rates experienced their first significant upswing in the past year from late November into early January, and the spread between spot and contract rates has started to tighten, according to the December 2022 installment of the ACT Freight Forecast, U.S. Rate, and Volume OUTLOOK report.
Plug Power Green Hydrogen Truck
By Joe Rinehart Agency 12 Jan, 2023
Produced using renewable energy, green hydrogen could help make transportation a carbon-neutral reality—if the cost can match the price of diesel. That is what Plug Power is trying to accomplish by 2030. Go behind the scenes at its operations in New York.
By Joe Rinehart Agency 04 Jan, 2023
Contract rates have spent the second half of 2022 on a slide, following a downward trendline that spot rates have seen for almost the entire calendar year. Both spot and contract rates are likely to ring in the New Year on the same slope, with the spread between the two narrowing.
2022 Year in Review
By Joe Rinehart Agency 27 Dec, 2022
All players in the global supply chain can agree on one thing: 2022 has been quite the ride! The looming impact of the pandemic, fluctuating economy and wavering political instability are likely to leave lasting effects for many into the new year.
By Joe Rinehart Agency 22 Dec, 2022
Just because truckers are on the road most of the year — including during the holidays — doesn’t mean that they can’t bring a little Christmas cheer along for the ride.
Plunge in US imports
By Joe Rinehart Agency 15 Dec, 2022
The situation remains far from normal at some U.S. ports. There were still 18 container ships at anchor waiting for a berth in Savannah, Georgia, on Monday. But for the country overall, weakening inbound cargo volumes are bringing imports close to where they were before the pandemic-induced spending splurge.
Rail Strike
By Joe Rinehart Agency 08 Dec, 2022
Most labor disputes never end up being debated in Congress. But thanks to a nearly century-old law that regulates labor relations only when it comes to railroads and airlines, what otherwise would be strictly an economic issue became a political one.
Rail strike
By Joe Rinehart Agency 30 Nov, 2022
A looming rail strike next month would send an aftershock through the trucking industry as the flow of goods via rail would need to be rerouted by truck – the capacity for which doesn't exist in large quantities.
By Joe Rinehart Agency 22 Nov, 2022
One of rail's largest labor unions voted against a tentative agreement with employers, setting the stage for a strike in two weeks. Other freight railroad unions have pledged to join the possible strike.
Show More
Share by: