Following an eight-day strike, South Korean truckers went back to work today after hammering out an agreement with the government just before midnight.
The source of the discontent was the Safe Trucking Freight Rates
System, which is due to expire in December, but citing rising fuel
costs, the truck drivers wanted it to be extended.
After initial talks fell through Sunday, both sides resumed
negotiations yesterday, and the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and
Transport (MOLIT) agreed to prolong the freight system, introduced in
2020 to ensure minimum wages and prevent overwork and dangerous driving.
While it is not clear how long the freight system will be extended,
the transport ministry said it planned to report the results of the
three-year system to the National Assembly so lawmakers could debate
whether to prolong it or even make it permanent.
MOLIT is also mulling expanding the freight system, which covers
container trailers and cement mixers, to vehicles carrying other cargo
types, as well as offering more fuel subsidies to truckers.
The strike disrupted cargo transport and manufacturing in South
Korea, with the steel, automobile and petrochemical sectors reporting at
least $1.23bn in damages, according to the Ministry of Trade, Industry
and Energy.
Project44’s Supply Chain Insights data show weekly median dwell times
at Busan have soared after the week of industrial action, with import
containers being kept in South Korea’s main container port for an
average of 14.29 days, up from the usual four. Export containers saw
their average dwell time go up to 11.38 days, from 3.5 the previous
week.
Supply Chain Insights VP Josh Brazil said: “The effects of the strike
are quickly working their way through the supply chain and will have
global ramifications. Dwell times at the port of Busan are starting to
skyrocket as containers face increasing delays getting in and out of the
port.”