Search

Supply Chain Latest: Cyber Attack Hobbles Major African Port Network - Bloomberg

soworos.blogspot.com

A devastating cyber attack at South Africa’s state-owned ports and freight-rail operator that hobbled trade at key container terminals led the company to declare its second force majeure this month.

Transnet took the measure after a July 22 security breach that forced the company to manually process container shipments at affected ports. It covered the Port of Durban, sub-Saharan Africa’s biggest container hub, as well as the Ngqura, Port Elizabeth and Cape Town harbors.

Transnet said Tuesday it’s made “significant progress” in restoring its computer systems, though companies including manganese producer Assmang maintained force majeures of their own that were first declared after deadly riots erupted on July 10 and temporarily shut key logistics arteries.

The port disruptions are hurting citrus farmers in the country, which is the world’s biggest shipper of the fruits after Spain, in the middle of their export season. They’re also weighing on shipments from the auto industry, which accounts for about 14% of South Africa’s total export value.

The Port of Durban handles 60% of South Africa’s shipments and also transports goods and commodities to and from nations in the region as far north as the Democratic Republic of Congo. The disruptions are likely to shave “quite a few” percentage points off southern Africa’s economic output, said Mike Schussler, chief economist at economists.co.za.

Transnet declared force majeure on a vital rail line earlier this month after the unrest, looting and arson affected its operations. Investigators are still trying to determine the source of the cyber attack and the extent of the damage it caused.

Prinesha Naidoo in Johannesburg

Charted Territory

Technical Fellows

After it lost a significant number of technical fellows last year, Boeing has repopulated its ranks of fellows by awarding that designation to more workers

Source: Boeing

Boeing will put its battered engineering reputation on the line again this week when its Starliner spacecraft blasts off from Florida with a load of supplies for the International Space Station. The mission is a do-over of a 2019 trip that almost ended in calamity, and a dress rehearsal for the Boeing capsule's first flight with astronauts later this year. If successful, it would narrow the gap with an ascendant rival, SpaceX, and answer the latest space-faring feats by the billionaire founders of Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic. 

Today’s Must Reads

  • Bargaining chip | China’s aspiration to become a true technological rival to the U.S. faces a foundational challenge: The country doesn’t control the semiconductors that are the building blocks for everything from smartphones to automated cars. 
  • American-made products | The Biden administration is proposing sweeping changes to its government purchasing rule to increase the content of American-made goods, senior administration officials said. 
  • Paint it black | A bumpy recovery among global airlines has given an unexpected early boost to one corner of the market: demand for aircraft paint. It’s come roaring back as production of new jets rises and pandemic-idled old ones change operators.
  • Double hit | Reno, Nevada, is facing a two-pronged energy-supply problem during a national glut: a scarcity of pipeline space and a trucker shortage as crews combating West Coast wildfires command more fuel.
  • Link closed | Protesters in eastern Ethiopia blocked and damaged a vital trade artery linking the landlocked African nation to a port in neighboring Djibouti.
  • Duty-free access | The U.S.’s trade chief plans to convene a meeting with African ministers before the end of the year to strengthen partnerships and discuss a law that provides duty-free access to the U.S. for thousands of goods from sub-Saharan nations.
  • Brexit mess | The European Union has backed off a threat of imminent legal action against the U.K. over breaches of the Northern Ireland protocol of the Brexit agreement as the two sides try to work through their differences.
  • PPE problem | U.S. production of PPE is widely seen as a matter of national security, but a domestic supply chain that’s sustainable over the long term is still a work in progress.

On the Bloomberg Terminal

  • Eye on clock | India's thermal-coal imports may rise 10% in 2021 on the post-pandemic recovery, auguring favorably for Australian and Indonesian coal miners, Bloomberg Intelligence says.
  • Work in progress | China is picking up the pace of financial opening to the world, looking to build links that are still small relative to the size of its economy and its role in global trade, Bloomberg Intelligence says.
  • Use the AHOY function to track global commodities trade flows.
  • Click HERE for automated stories about supply chains.
  • See BNEF for BloombergNEF’s analysis of clean energy, advanced transport, digital industry, innovative materials, and commodities.
  • Click VRUS on the terminal for news and data on the coronavirus and here for maps and charts.

Like Supply Lines?

Don’t keep it to yourself. Colleagues and friends can sign up here. We also publish the New Economy Daily, a briefing on the latest in global economics.

For even more: Follow @economics on Twitter and subscribe to Bloomberg.com for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and gain expert analysis from exclusive subscriber-only newsletters.

How are we doing? We want to hear what you think about this newsletter. Let our trade tsar know.

    Adblock test (Why?)



    "network" - Google News
    July 28, 2021 at 06:00PM
    https://ift.tt/3BPi5rS

    Supply Chain Latest: Cyber Attack Hobbles Major African Port Network - Bloomberg
    "network" - Google News
    https://ift.tt/2v9ojEM
    https://ift.tt/2KVQLik

    Bagikan Berita Ini

    0 Response to "Supply Chain Latest: Cyber Attack Hobbles Major African Port Network - Bloomberg"

    Post a Comment

    Powered by Blogger.