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Peshkov: The shortage of goods in the Russian Far East is due to the global crisis of the supply chain

Russia’s Far East is facing shortages of some basic goods due to “traffic jams” in its ports triggered by the global supply chain crisis, the Kremlin said Tuesday in response to an online protest over empty store shelves.

“Potatoes are running out, only one store still has them. Pork is almost gone. There is no lamb and almost no fish,” said a text message of protest addressed to Russian President Vladimir Putin and posted on the Internet by a resident of Chukotka. Russian Far East.

The letter of protest, which has no legal force but has garnered more than 40,000 signatures in support, also states that fruit, dairy products and eggs are hard to find in various villages in this remote area.

“There are some logistical problems caused by the international crisis in the supply chain that has been going on in recent weeks,” spokesman Dmitry Peshkov told reporters, adding that “ports in the Far East are indeed overloaded.”

Russian market participants told Reuters in October that the explosive rise in shipping costs was forcing Chinese commodity producers to ship more goods by rail through Russia instead of via the Suez Canal, as the world’s seaports are closed.

This situation in turn has aggravated Russia’s limited capacity.

The regional governor of Kamchatka, on the edge of Russia’s Far East in the Pacific, raised the issue last month and said some supplies to the region were delayed by up to three months.

The governor of Sakhalin, another region of Russia’s Far East, said in early November there was a queue of containers stuck in ports in and near the city of Vladivostok.

A source in the transport sector told Reuters that Chukotka, Kamchatka, Magadan and the Sakhalin region depend on Vladivostok ports for the supply of goods.

These ports are having difficulty with the inflow of cargo volume, the source said. But Yuri Trutnev, the Kremlin’s envoy to the Far East, said the number of containers stuck in the Far East had fallen by 30 percent to 5,300 in the past week, Interfax news agency reported.

Russia’s Transport Ministry did not respond to a request for comment from Reuters.

SOURCE: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

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Source From: Capital

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