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DP World cyber hack: QLD small business has a 40-foot container in limbo

A Queensland retailer whose container shipment was caught up in the DP World cyber attack says further delays are likely, as new transportation bottlenecks compound the disruption faced at major Australian ports.
David Adams
David Adams
dp world container
A shipment of goods at Exotic Impressions' Cairns showroom in 2022. Source: Exotic Impressions

A Queensland retailer whose container shipment was caught up in the DP World cyber attack says further delays are likely, as new transportation bottlenecks compound the disruption faced at major Australian ports.

DP World, an international logistics giant based in the United Arab Emirates, shuttered its Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Fremantle ports on Friday in response to a major cyber attack.

The company, which is responsible for handling 40% of Australiaโ€™s maritime imports, resumed operations early on Monday afternoon.

That resumption will come as a relief to Australian businesses, which faced the prospect of a weeks-long port shutdown ahead of the busy Christmas shopping period.

But it will take time for those disrupted shipments to reach their final destination, heaping complexities and costs on small traders expecting containers full of goods.

Michelle Fiumara is the entrepreneur behind Cairns business Exotic Impressions, an importer and retailer of homewares, statues, and water features.

Exotic Impressions imports a 40-foot container full of goods once every three months, Fiumara told SmartCompany on Monday afternoon.

Shipments arrive in Brisbane before being transported by rail to Cairns, in a process which usually takes between five and seven days.

Fiumara said the latest shipment was already delayed by protected industrial action undertaken by port workers, โ€œwhere it just sat out at sea because they couldnโ€™t land itโ€.

โ€œThen this cyber attackโ€ฆ Apparently it got into port on the 11th, so weโ€™re still waitingโ€, said Fiumara.

โ€œI spoke to my freight forwarder this morning actually, and she is none the wiser, and doesnโ€™t know when when it will be released, because their computer system, theyโ€™ve got none at the moment,โ€ she continued.

โ€œTherefore containers canโ€™t be offloaded off the ship.โ€

The status of Exotic Impressionsโ€™ container was still unclear on Monday afternoon, even after DP World confirmed operations had resumed.

Once the container is safely on land and prepared for rail transport to Cairns, Fiumara is bracing for further delays as businesses rush to secure their containerโ€™s place on limited rolling stock.

โ€œObviously, if thereโ€™s a backlog, usually a small business like myself will get pushed to the back of the queue,โ€ she said.

โ€œAnd the bigger businesses, big companies take priority, obviously.โ€

Placement on a train โ€œcould happenโ€, she said.

โ€œThey might ring me this afternoon and say, โ€˜Yep, weโ€™ve got on the rail for Wednesdayโ€™, for example, but at this stage, I have no news.โ€

The resumption of DP Worldโ€™s port activities has assuaged fears of a weeks-long delay, which could have seriously compromised retailers ahead of the Christmas shopping season.

Still, Fiumara expects the delay will cause hard conversations with customers.

โ€œWhat I do is put out fires with everybody, you know. I have to explain to them once again why the shipment hasnโ€™t turned up.โ€

Customs brokers worried for small business clients

Customs brokers, who work with small businesses to clear their imports through Australiaโ€™s customs regime, fear the cyber attack could result in extra costs for their clients.

Renee Wilson, director of Customers Brokers Australia, on Monday advised her clients to โ€œkeep a note of all delays, for all individual shipments as this may be required for insurance, detention, demurrage, and other claimsโ€.

Missed delivery windows at warehouses and dishonoured delivery contract terms could add to businessโ€™ woes, she wrote on LinkedIn.

Others fear small businesses are particularly vulnerable to shipping delays.

A pandemic-era shift from warehousing to โ€˜just in timeโ€™ shipments means many businesses can expect significant headaches when a port shuts down, said Peter McRae, CEO of Platinum Freight Management.

โ€œWe have a high percentage of small to medium businesses that come to us and I already know that these small to medium businesses, and even microbusinesses will be doubly concerned,โ€ McRae told SmartCompany on Monday morning.

โ€œThey donโ€™t generally hold stock, they generally want to replace for when the other stuff is being sold.โ€

While businesses like Exotic Impressions may import an entire container full of goods, McRae said those that opt for โ€˜less than container loadโ€™ (LCL) shipments can expect to wait even longer for their imports to be separated and sorted at a freight depot.

โ€œWith these smaller shipments, that means itโ€™s going to add extra time for them to get their goods as Christmas is coming,โ€ he said.

Those delays and additional costs will only hamper businesses โ€œpushed to the limitโ€ by broader economic difficulties, McRae added.

โ€œOverall, putting the issue of the ports away, thereโ€™s no predictability in the economy,โ€ he said.

โ€œNobody knows what is going to happen, interest rates are going up. Are people really going to shut their wallets, are people going to continue [spending]?โ€