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Panama Canal Drought Forces Cuts to Shipping Traffic

  • #Panama
  • #Weather
  • #Healthy eating
  • #Drought
Panama Canal Drought Forces Cuts to Shipping Traffic
story
NOV 2023
Image copyright: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images [via Getty Images]
story last updated JUN 2024

The Spin

Narrative A

Shipping is the industry most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Roughly 90% of global goods reach their destination via maritime shipping. The demand for goods is growing and the need for shipping vessels will grow. Any impacts to shipping lanes and ports could come with a costly price tag of up to $10B per year through 2050 and then grow to $25B annually through 2100. The maritime industry will need to dig deep to ensure it becomes sustainable.

CNBC

Narrative B

Maritime transport is the most critical component of international trade. Just as the industry gets back on its feet following the pandemic and Russia’s war against Ukraine, it cannot afford to suffer another setback. Regulators are so over-focused on green-washing the shipping industry that they are missing the bigger picture, overlooking the cost to companies already navigating the fallout of recent upheaval. Without properly recognizing its significance, the industry that sustains the lives of so many will inevitably face collapse.

Harvard Business Review

Metaculus Prediction


Articles on this story

A drought has forced authorities to further slash traffic in Panama Canal, disrupting global trade
Associated PressAUG 2023
Chaos at Panama Canal as global warming hits trade route
IndependentAUG 2023
Global trade faces even more turmoil as Panama Canal is forced to slash ship transits by more than a third due to drought - adding to chaos caused by Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Red Sea
Daily MailAUG 2023