Middle East crisis reroutes shipping via Cape of Good Hope

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz due to escalating tensions in the Middle East has forced global shipping companies to reroute vessels around the Cape of Good Hope, causing delays and higher costs. South African retailers like Shoprite report disruptions with goods stuck in transit, while rising oil prices add to inflation pressures. Experts warn of supply chain shocks affecting businesses worldwide.

The Strait of Hormuz closure, stemming from US-Israeli strikes on Iran, has created bottlenecks in global shipping, including the Suez Canal. Shipping firms are now directing containers around the Cape of Good Hope, adding 10-14 days to routes and disrupting production and seasonal planning.

South African retailer Shoprite indicated that 162 containers of goods remain stuck, as reported by Currency News. This affects supply chains for essential items, with potential shortages looming for imported products.

Oil prices have climbed to $78 per barrel from $64 a week prior, with forecasts suggesting $100 if tensions persist. Allianz Trade noted, “The US-Israeli strikes on Iran will have implications for energy markets, shipping costs, inflation risks and financial conditions – but everything hinges on how long the conflict lasts.” A prolonged conflict could echo 2022's inflation surge, though a short escalation is anticipated.

The Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply (CIPS) described an “immediate supply chain shock” for South African businesses. Paul Vos, regional managing director of CIPS Southern Africa, explained, “Rerouting around the Cape is adding 10-14 days to global shipping cycles, disrupting production schedules and seasonal demand planning, while war-risk premiums, fuel surcharges, and container rate hikes are being imposed rapidly, placing immediate pressure on cash flow.”

CIPS recommends building surcharge pass-throughs into contracts, using indexed pricing tied to freight benchmarks, and reviewing insurance for war risks. Reuters reported that MSC will impose an emergency fuel surcharge starting 16 March 2026 on Europe-southern Africa routes: R980 ($60) per TEU for standard containers and R1,471 ($90) for refrigerated ones.

In South Africa, elevated oil prices combined with a weakening rand may halt interest rate cuts or prompt hikes by the Reserve Bank, which targets 3.0% inflation. While panic buying is not yet advised, the situation underscores vulnerabilities in import-dependent retail.

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