China’s announcement of military drills around Taiwan as US House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi visits the island is creating ripple effects across global supply
chains, prompting detours and delaying energy shipments.
Gas suppliers are rerouting or reducing speed on some liquefied natural gas
vessels currently en route to North Asia, according to people familiar with the
matter. Shipments to Taiwan and Japan this weekend will be affected, said the
people, who requested anonymity as the information isn’t public.
Shipping companies are assessing their options after China’s response to the
visit of the highest-ranking US official to the island in 25 years. The actions
threaten to disrupt one of the world’s busiest waterways.
China, which regards Taiwan as part of its territory, condemned Pelosi’s visit
and said its military exercises would include “long-range live firing” near
Taiwan starting as soon as Tuesday evening, as well as more drills encircling
the island from Aug. 4. Early Wednesday, state broadcaster CCTV said China had
begun joint Navy and Air Force maneuvers in the region.
Local branches of China’s maritime safety administration have issued multiple
warnings for ships to avoid certain territories, citing the military exercises.
A notice from the regulator in Fujian, the province along the Taiwan Strait,
said ships were banned from sailing into the areas where exercises will be
conducted from Thursday to Sunday.
Taiwan’s Maritime and Port Bureau warned ships to find alternative routes to
access and depart from seven major ports on the island during China’s drills,
according to the Apple Daily.
Ship managers and shipowners said traffic overall through the Taiwan Strait was
normal on Wednesday, and consulting firms reported little impact for oil
tankers in the region.
But as China ramps up military activity and bans take effect, shippers may need
to reroute vessels around the eastern side of the island, rather than through
the busy waterway between mainland China and Taiwan. That will create delays of
about three days, according to shipbrokers.
“If there is live firing in the part of the straits that are used for
navigation, then tanker traffic is likely to divert,” said Anoop Singh, head of
tanker research at Braemar. He added, however, that “it is likely
counterproductive economically for China to close navigations through the
straits.”
While the disruptions could exacerbate a shortage of LNG amid an energy crunch,
delays of a few days aren’t uncommon. Shippers often face typhoons at this time
of year that create similar disruptions.
The Taiwan Strait is a key route for supply chains, with almost half of the
global container fleet passing through the waterway this year, according to
data compiled by Bloomberg. However, only about 14% of China’s oil and gas
vessels have transited the strait this year, according to analytics firm
Vortexa. Smaller vessels or those with shorter voyages are more likely taking
that route, while bigger oil tankers sail east of Taiwan.
The military exercises are scheduled to end by next week, and shippers and
analysts will be watching to see if it blows over quickly.
“We might be concerned if the drills become longer and more intense to impact
supply chains, but there is no sign of that happening now,” says Huang Huiming,
a fund manager at Nanjing Jing Heng Investment Management Co.
— With assistance by Serene Cheong, Charlotte Yang, April Ma, Claire Che, Kevin
Varley, and Debby Wu
(Adds notice on Taiwan ports in sixth paragraph.)