Prof. Hercules Haralambides
A series of disruptions and shocks to world trade, such as the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, the Red Sea crisis and the Panama Canal draught, have inflicted serious blows on the reliability of logistics and global supply chain management; in other words, on the very ‘system’ not only of trading but of organizing our every day lives. Here, I am attempting to describe measurable impacts of such ‘shocks’ on trading arrangements; on shifts in ocean routings (e.g., circumnavigating Africa); shipping costs; on old and new alternatives to areas of high risk (e.g., Red Sea); on resilience of maritime supply chains; and, finally, on ideas of shortening global supply chains (nearshoring; friendshoring) and the future of globalization. In all this, the importance of safety and security of infrastructure is highlighted and, therein, the strategic role of ‘chokepoints’ (Bab Al-Mandab (Gulf of Aden), Red Sea, Malacca Straits, Panama Canal, etc.) is explained with real current examples. Seminal contributions (and references) from global think-tanks are critically analyzed and synthesized.