
DOHA - Until the Iran war, shipments
of Austrian spruce timber to Qatar, where the wood is used to
support concrete and make basic frames on construction sites, werea matter of routine.
The standard 2x4, as it is known in the building trade, was
typically sourced from Austria in Europe, shipped to Dubai’s
Jebel Ali port, transferred to a feeder vessel and delivered to
Qatar’s Hamad Port in about 45 days.
It must now be offloaded, trucked overland and reloaded onto new
ships, adding thousands of dollars in costs and months to
delivery times, as the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz
has caused unprecedented disruption to oil and other trade.

BEAMS OF WHITE WOOD REFLECT WIDER CHAOS
Anything from medicine to basic foodstuff and the 2x4 beams of
spruce, referred to as white wood, are caught in the upheaval.
The two-inch (5 cm) by four-inchbeams of white wood that come in
various lengths are not a strategic resource, but any shortage
would slow activity in the construction sector and drive up
costs.
A building materials supplier in Qatar, who shared details with
Reuters on condition of anonymity, said that when the
U.S.-Israeli airstrikes were launched on Iran on February 28,
unleashing a new phase of Middle Eastern conflict, he had 17
containers of white wood on their way.
Each container holds around 2,850 beams of Austrian spruce,
worth about 15,000 euros ($17,702).
The cargo left the Croatian port of Rijeka as planned, but
instead of sailing to Jebel Ali, was diverted to Khor Fakkan on
the UAE’s east coast, avoiding a transit of the Strait of Hormuz
that would have been required to reach Jebel Ali.
After that, the timber was trucked to Abu Dhabi and reloaded
onto feeder vessels bound for Doha. The detour added a surcharge
of about $3,600 per container - some shippers quoted the
supplier surcharges as high as $5,000 per container - more than
triple the normal cost of shipping a 40-foot container of timber
from Europe to Qatar, the supplier said.
Even after being rerouted, the cargo has yet to arrive in Qatar
and delivery is expected to take another one to two months.
At the same time, several containers of plywood that the
supplier had ordered were loaded onto feeder vessels at Jebel
Ali and spent weeks at sea before being returned to port,
underscoring how importers lose control over shipments once they
are on the water.
RISING COSTS FOR BASIC GOODS
Before the conflict, the supplier said he would sell a standard
2x4 for around QAR 23–25 ($6.30–$6.90) per piece. Additional
costs caused by rerouting and longer transit have pushed his
selling price to QAR 35-37 ($9.60–$10.20) per piece.
Future shipments could be more expensive. Routing timber via
Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea port of Jeddah, which is a possibility
under consideration, would involve higher shipping charges and
trucking 1,500 kilometres across the Arabian Peninsula to Qatar,
further raising per-piece costs.
Other supply chains are equally disrupted.
Before the Iran war broke out, logistics firm Geodis had planned
to fly medicine from the UK to Dubai in about four days. Now the
journey traversing land and sea is expected to take about 40
days.
For a container of onions travelling from the western shores of
India to a warehouse in Dubai, a week-long journey is now a
three-week ordeal at twice the cost, according to Ravi Punjabi,
Managing Director at Avalon General Land Transport, a UAE-based
logistics company.
SOME COUNTRIES MORE AFFECTED THAN OTHERS
Dubai and the wider United Arab Emirates, which have built their
economies on being a regional hub for tourism and trade, have
the advantage of ports - Fujairah and Khor Fakkan - on the
Arabian Sea outside the Gulf.
For other countries in the region, the issue is much worse,
notably Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait that depend on the Gulf and
the Strait of Hormuz.
Governments across the Gulf have sought to coordinate to ease
the bottlenecks.
During a meeting with his counterparts last month, Saudi
Arabia’s Minister of Transport Saleh bin Nasser Al-Jasser
announced measures, including allowing empty refrigerated trucks
from other Gulf countries to enter the kingdom and create shared
storage and redistribution zones at King Abdulaziz Port in
Dammam.
Dubai has also activated what it described as a green corridor
with Oman, allowing goods diverted to Omani ports to be trucked
directly to the UAE with expedited customs clearance and
facilitating the export of goods from the UAE to global markets
via Omani ports.
The solutions are imperfect, however, and transport executives
say flows into Dubai and onward to other Gulf capitals are
likely to remain slower and more expensive.
Prices for food items, personal care products and industrial
supplies have already risen by 5% to 10% in parts of the region
since the end of February, with further increases possible if
shipping disruptions persist.
Geodis executive Eric Martin-Neuville said items, including some
medicines and food that have to be kept cool, were vulnerable.
“You have only so many plugs for electricity, so you can only
accommodate so many containers in the port,” he said.
The uncertainty adds to headaches for businesses that have
previously experienced disruption that has endured.
While 45 days to ship white wood from Europe was standard before
February, there was a time before the Red Sea Houthi attacks
began in 2023 that shipment took only around a month. Even
though the attacks have eased, most shippers detour around the
Cape of Good Hope.
In Qatar, the building materials supplier said he has enough
white wood stock for several months, but must soon place new
orders without knowing which routes will be available or at what
cost. --- Reuters
($1 = 0.8474 euros)
Source:
al-monitor.com