NDIC Site Still Compromised -- Unable To Post Wells Coming Off Confidential List -- Part 10 -- May 22, 2022
Now it's Beijing.
Several signs point to THE possibility of Chinese officials instituting
at least a partial lockdown of the northern port city of Tianjin as
early as this weekend. The largest northern Chinese port, Tianjin is
also a city of over 12 million people, and its port is vital for
delivering goods--bulk ores, coal, liquid fuels--for the region's heavy
industries and textile manufacturing.
The Omicron variant has already been detected in the city, notably in
the Beichen and Dongli districts, where local health officials
mandated localized testing and quarantine restrictions on May 16.
Widespread testing through these areas--and the removal of tens of
thousands of residents into forced quarantine--now looks like it might
spread throughout the city. Local officials have also already gone ahead
and identified a scapegoat: imported frozen food products.
What's a little authoritarian lockdown without some trade nationalism?
Tianjin already experienced a partial lockdown in January of this year.
Partial in part due to the city's vital role as the primary port serving
Beijing, and also a domestic concern over optics during the Olympics.
As we've seen from reports and local social media uploads, the lockdowns
at the very least cause an undue amount of stress on local Chinese
residents. At their worst, they reveal the ugliest face of an
authoritarian regime that uses drones to threaten its citizens who dare
to scream out in hunger in the middle of the night.
Beyond the human toll of these lockdowns, the Chinese economy and
manufacturing base is increasingly finding itself disconnected from
global trade. China's financial hub of Shanghai is currently in its
seventh week of lock-down, the southern port city and manufacturing hub
of Guangzhou is under lockdown, more and more districts of the capital
city of Beijing are entering a so-called "slow motion" lockdown. If we
add in Tianjin, as it increasingly looks like we might, that's several
of China's largest trading and industrial zones, plus the administrative
core, under lockdown.
Even in cases where the government seeks to ease lockdowns for critical
manufacturing and port operations, worker shortages in China are causing
all manner of delays and supply chain dislocations. Over a hundred
ships are waiting off of the port of Shanghai as of writing (Hong Kong
and Shenzen have nearly 200). Lest you think that labor issues have been
sorted out at Western ports, let me remind you that there is still a
wait of over three weeks for ships to dock at the port of Vancouver.
