Supply Chain

How Port Congestion Impacts Your Supply Chain

March 13, 2024 · 6 min read

Port congestion has become one of the most significant challenges in global logistics. When vessels queue for days waiting to berth, the effects cascade through entire supply chains, affecting everything from inventory levels to customer satisfaction.

Understanding Port Congestion

Port congestion occurs when the volume of cargo arriving at a port exceeds its handling capacity. This can be caused by:

The Ripple Effects

When ports congest, the impacts spread far beyond the terminal:

📊 Current Congestion Levels

Shanghai: 34 vessels waiting, 5.2 day average wait. Rotterdam: 15 vessels, 2.8 days. Los Angeles: 12 vessels, 2.3 days. Monitor live data via FreightPulse API.

Mitigation Strategies

Proactive supply chain managers employ several tactics:

The Data Advantage

Companies with access to real-time port congestion data can make better decisions. By monitoring vessel queues, dwell times, and congestion trends, logistics teams can:

Monitor Global Port Congestion

Real-time data on vessel queues, wait times, and dwell days.

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Looking Ahead

Port congestion will likely remain a recurring challenge as global trade grows faster than infrastructure investment. The companies that thrive will be those with visibility into port conditions and the agility to adapt their logistics strategies accordingly.