The Jerusalem Post

Business heads fear lasting Red Sea delays

- • By MAHA EL DAHAN and MEGAN DAVIES

DAVOS, Switzerlan­d (Reuters) – Business chiefs warned on Wednesday that disruption to shipping in the Red Sea caused by attacks by Yemen’s Houthis could affect supply chains for months and lead to a shortage of tankers needed to transport fuel.

Attacks by the Iran-allied Houthi militia on ships in the region since November have slowed trade between Asia and Europe and alarmed major powers – an escalation of Israel’s more than threemonth-old war with Palestinia­n Hamas militants in Gaza.

The Houthis say they are acting in solidarity with Palestinia­ns and have threatened to expand attacks to include US ships in response to American

and British strikes on their sites in Yemen.

Italy wants fellow European Union members to agree next week to create an EU maritime security mission so that it can become operationa­l as soon as possible, Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said on Wednesday.

On the diplomatic front, India is engaged in negotiatio­ns with Iran on the attacks, an Indian government source said, adding India’s foreign minister was in Iran this week for talks with his counterpar­t.

Maersk and other large shipping lines have instructed hundreds of commercial vessels to stay clear of the Red Sea, sending them on a longer route around Africa or pausing until the safety of vessels can be assured.

“This is extremely disruptive because you have close to 20% of global trade that transits through the Bab al-Mandab Strait (to the Red Sea),” said Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc.

“It’s one of the most important arteries of global trade and global supply chains and it’s clogged up right now,” he told Reuters Global Markets Forum in Davos.

Freight rates have more than doubled since early December, according to maritime consultanc­y Drewry’s world container index, while insurance sources say war risk premiums for shipments through the Red Sea are also rising.

Banking executives have said they were worried the crisis might create inflationa­ry pressures that could ultimately delay or reverse interest rate cuts.

The attacks are causing major disruption to Italian ports, operators say, and fueling fears that a prolonged crisis may force companies to redraw routes and move traffic away from the Mediterran­ean more permanentl­y.

US STRIKES

The alternativ­e shipping route around South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope can add 10-14 days to a journey when compared to a passage via the Red Sea to the Suez Canal.

Prolonged attacks by the Houthis on ships would lead to a shortage of tankers, the CEO of Saudi oil giant Aramco said.

“If it’s in the short term, tankers might be available ... But if it’s longer term, it might be a problem,” CEO Amin Nasser said in an interview on the sidelines of the World Economic

Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos.

The US military carried out new strikes in Yemen on Tuesday against anti-ship ballistic missiles in a Houthi-controlled part of the country as a missile hit a Greek-owned vessel in the Red Sea.

In a bid to cut off their funding and supply of weapons, US President Joe Biden’s administra­tion plans to put Houthi rebels back on a US list of terrorist organizati­ons, two US officials told Reuters.

In a sign of the tensions, a Malta-flagged container ship was approached on Wednesday by three skiffs and a drone 10 miles southwest of Yemen’s Dhubab. No damage or casualties were reported, British maritime security firm Ambrey said in an advisory note.

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