Supply-chain and staffing issues hit ink and now blankets

Aug 24, 2021 at 03:41 am by admin


After warning of supply chain-driven increases in ink prices, Flint Group has turned attention to printing blankets with a similar warning.

This time the heads-up is from Flint’s Day International division, with Chad Holzer, the company’s image transfer technologies business president, advising that continued challenges from the COVID pandemic have led to ongoing cost increases across the global supply chain, from logistics to raw materials. Staffing shortages at its US factory are also leading to extra costs.

Holzer says “significant increases” in demand for packaging-related products require production facilities to be run at peak levels. The company is adhering to WHO and local authority-recommended practices, while coping with “unprecedented challenges” with employee absenteeism due to COVID 19, delays in global supply chains, and critical raw material shortages.

Due to these challenges, Day International is announcing the need to increase prices on printing blankets in heatset, coldset and commercial sheetfed markets.

He says Flint will consult with customers and partners “in the spirit of mutual cooperation and support” as it seeks to maintain strong relationships with partners.

-Earlier Flint commercial, publication and sheetfed global supply chain director Vijay Patel says the global COVID-19 pandemic is continuing to impact supply chains across the globe.

ink manufacturers have been greatly affected by freight availability, with “unprecedented” impact on the entire supply chain. “Suppliers to the print industry have witnessed that the global ocean market has remained severely impacted by widespread disruptions,” he says. “All indexes on the sector are reporting week-on-week rate increases with new record highs been seen for many lanes during the past months.

“These disruptions are as a result of operational capacity issues in a number of international ports.”

He says the combination of COVID outbreaks affecting port operations and general container shortages has resulted in “extreme pressure” to secure space on steam shipping lines.

“At present, there is no evidence that the situation is going to stabilise any time soon. The demand of the steamship lines is on the rise as increased demand driven by economies opening and unprecedented money supply to various sectors last year created a perfect storm for the supply chain disruptions.

“While there is demand from the market and the willingness to pay there is no incentive for the carriers to ease the situation. For Flint CPS this has resulted in a direct impact on material supplies to Europe and North America from Asian markets.”

To mitigate these impacts Patel says Flint has increased local stocks of key materials to gain some flexibility in supply from Asia. “We are also working with logistics partners to ensure container availability and reviewing alternative materials from local markets to ease the burden on steam shipping requirements.”

He says disruption to logistics is not limited to ocean freight, with the European road market impacted by a continuing widespread shortage of drivers and equipment “directly impacting quality, supply and reliability, and a high spike in logistics demand to continue.

Additionally, Brent Crude Oil and WTI rose by another 20 per cent, making 45 per cent on levels at the end of 2020, with increases forecast to continue. In North America anticipated supply imbalances are expected to continue into early 2022.

With other drivers, disruption and cost impacts are set to continue to at least the end of the year “with further price increases to follow as a result”, he says.

Sections: Print business

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