CNA – South Korea’s average daily shipments of petrochemical products have plunged by 90 per cent since a strike by truckers in the country, the Korea Petrochemical Industry Association said yesterday.
The country’s petrochemical firms joined automobile and steel makers in cutting operations due to mounting inventories as the strike enters its seventh day, posing a test for the country’s new president and deepening stress on Asia’s fourth-largest economy, already facing stagflationary pressures.
“The Cargo Truckers Solidarity Union’s collective action to reject transportation is spreading the damage to major petrochemical complexes in Ulsan, Yeosu and Daesan,” the Korea Petrochemical Industry Association said in a statement.
The 22,000-strong union is protesting against soaring fuel prices and demanding minimum pay guarantees. Four rounds of negotiations with the government have failed to find a compromise.
It was not confirmed whether companies have already cut operations, but a source at a major petrochemical company told Reuters most firms were still storing finished products with the hope of resuming transportation.
Automakers, hit hard as they were not able to receive a timely supply of components and transport finished products, also formed a task-force team within their trade association to monitor the situation and call for an early resolution.
Steelmaker POSCO has said it would halt some plants due to a lack of space to store unshipped products. Automaker Hyundai Motor has cut production at some lines and cement makers have also cut operations.
Prolonged labour strife could test President Yoon Suk-yeol, a political novice who took office five weeks ago, potentially distracting from his conservative agenda and raising the risk of long-term antagonism with powerful unions.
The government has urged the truckers to return to work but said it would seek to reflect their demands in the legislative process and keep trying to end the strife through dialogue.
The truckers demand an extension of subsidies, set to expire this year, that guarantee minimum wages as fuel prices rise. The government said it is up to Parliament to change the legislation.
As the global economy struggles with supply bottlenecks, any prolonged slowdown in the production and shipments of chips, petrochemicals and autos could add to concerns of rising inflation and slowing growth.