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Climate change will disrupt supply chains much more than Covid

The onset of the coronavirus pandemic caused unprecedented, worldwide supply-chain disruptions, but experts say that's a drop in the bucket compared with the disruptions that climate change will cause. Wildfires in the American West, flooding in China and Europe and drought in South America are already disrupting supplies of everything from lumber to chocolate to sushi rice.  

Take, for example, lumber. About a quarter of the lumber consumed in the U.S. comes from Canada, which is seeing severe drought and wildfire conditions. "The wildfires burning in Western Canada are significantly impacting the supply chain and our ability to transport product to market," Canadian lumber producer Canfor Corp. said in July. "As a result, we are implementing short-term production curtailments at our Canadian sawmills”. The homebuilding industry is already suffering severe supply-chain issues due to Covid, and fires are only exacerbating that.

Brazil is now suffering its worst drought in more than a century. That, in part, caused the price of coffee futures to soar in July, nearly double what they were the previous year. While the increase has not been passed on to the consumer yet, experts say it will be shortly. Even sushi rice is getting hit. Two-thirds of America's is grown in California, which faces water shortages due to drought and the wildfires. Rice production involves massive quantities of water.

Extreme weather events also hit supply chains when workers are unable to physically get to their jobs. Workplace disruptions caused by climate change could lead to more than $2 trillion in productivity losses by 2030, according to a recent report from the United Nations Development Program.

To manage these effects, businesses will need to be proactive. Top strategies to mitigate supply-chain risk are often referred to as bridging and buffering. Bridging means bridging the gap with suppliers to make sure communication is strong during a climate crisis. Buffering means having some products in reserve as a buffer and having backup suppliers should the main ones fail.

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/19/climate-change-supply-chain-disruptions-how-to-prepare.html
MICE & News Climate change will disrupt supply chains much more than Covid
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