Typhoons, Markets and Shipping - Update End of October

The more destructive part of the typhoon season has now begun in South East Asia, and with the effects of a La Nina weather pattern, it is forecast that there will also be increased rains in the coming months, this not only affects factories, farmers, and production but also causes delays to shipping routes across South East Asia.

With many ports in South East Asia and the Philippines already congested with freight, due to reduced capacity because of staffing shortages and freight prioritisation caused by COVID. We are encountering more and more ships rerouting and stuck in anchorages longer.

The usual container movement network has changed totally in 2020 and this has led to shortages of the right containers being in the right place at the right time, this is a global issue right now. (https://theloadstar.com/container-shortages-a-growing-problem-for-us-agriculture-shippers/  )

Summary  

Because of this disruption in the Philippines, we are now seeing prices increase on VCO and Desiccated Coconut.

The delays on the ground and shipping issues mean usual delivery expectations are not possible as we have seen shipping times increase from the norms and exact arrival dates impossible to predict.

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Update on the Latest Typhoon in the Philippines November 13th 2020

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Coconut Industry in the Philippines Weather and COVID – Quarter Four 2020