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Shanghai Truckers Strike For Third Day, Threatening China's Exports

China Truck

First Posted: 04/22/11 02:44 PM ET Updated: 06/22/11 06:12 AM ET

SHANGHAI - (Melanie Lee and Royston Chan) - Striking truck drivers protested for a third day on Friday in Shanghai's main harbor district amid heavy police presence and signs the action has already started to curb exports from the world's busiest container port.

The strike is a very public demonstration of anger over rising consumer prices and fuel price increases in China.

It comes as the government struggles to contain higher inflation, which hit 5.4 percent in March, fearful that rising prices could fuel protests like those that have rocked the Middle East.

A crowd of up to 600 people milled about outside an office of a logistics company near the Baoshan Port, one of the city's ports. Some threw rocks at trucks whose drivers had not joined in the strikes, breaking the windows of at least one truck.

The strikers, many of them independent contractors who carry goods to and from the port, stopped work on Wednesday demanding the government do something about high fuel costs and what some called high fees charged by logistics firms, said the drivers, who clashed with police on Thursday.

China is especially wary about threats to social stability following online calls for Middle East-inspired "Jasmine Revolution" protests and has detained dozens of dissidents, including renowned artist Ai Weiwei.

As many as 50 police officers were at the area on Friday, and at least two people were arrested after throwing rocks at trucks. Plainclothes officers also briefly detained some foreign reporters and manhandled a Reuters photographer.

The crowd thinned out after a policeman said authorities planned to meet representatives of the truck drivers on Monday for talks aimed at ending the strike.

"Please disperse and go back," he said through a megaphone to truckers who had gathered near a road junction. "We are already talking to your representatives. There will be an answer for you on Monday."

But two truck drivers told Reuters that they would continue their campaign for the government to offset the rising cost of fuel.

"We are continuing our strike," said a 38-year-old truck driver surnamed Liu. "There has been no response from the government or anybody else. There's nothing we can do."

Workers organized the strike using word of mouth, said a driver.

China's tightly controlled state media has made no mention of the unrest, and the city's government, which is working hard to turn glamorous Shanghai into a global financial hub to compete with Hong Kong and London, has denied knowledge of the strike.

"We're currently not aware of the situation," a spokesman with the Shanghai city government said. He declined to be identified.

EXPORTS SLOW

Duncan Innes-Ker, China analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said the strikes could inspire protests by workers in other transport sectors, given rising fuel prices.

"There are strikes in the taxi driver industry on a regular basis in numerous cities across China," he said. "These are happening and they will continue to happen, and if the oil price continues to rise they will get worse."

China said in early April it would lift retail gasoline and diesel prices by 5-5.5 percent to record highs. [ID:nSGE736009].

An official reached by telephone at Shanghai International Port (Group) Co, which runs the Shanghai port, told Reuters the strike "has not affected operations," though would not comment further.

But one executive said the action was already starting to affect the port's operations, at least for exports.

"The strike has delayed exports and many ships cannot take on a full load before leaving," said Wei Yujun, assistant to the general manager at China Star Distribution Center (Shanghai) Co.

"For example, if one ship carries 5,000 containers en route to Hong Kong and the U.S., now they can only carry 1,000 or 2,000 containers," Wei said, adding that such containers typically carry goods such as textiles and machinery.

Traders said that the strike had caused only minimal disruptions to refined copper flows. Waigaoqiao, together with two other bonded areas in Shanghai, hold about 80 percent of China's bonded copper stocks.

"There is more than enough stocks in the bonded warehouses to offset any short-term impact on supplies," said Bonnie Liu, a Macquarie analyst based in Shanghai.

Shanghai's most active copper futures contract closed flat at 71,440 yuan at midday.

FEW OPTIONS FOR WORKERS

Chinese workers have few means of pressing for better wages.

The government prohibits unions independent of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, an umbrella organization run by the Communist Party. Historically, the ACFTU tries to prevent strikes.

"The most basic issue isn't simply that fuel prices are rising. It is that when fuel prices rise, the truck drivers don't have an independent channel to express their interests," said Li Qiang, executive director of China Labor Watch, told Reuters from New York.

The unrest is occurring near at least one of the port's five major working zones -- Waigaoqiao, a massive free-trade zone and bonded storage warehouse.

Shanghai overtook Singapore in 2010 to become the world's busiest container port. The Shanghai port handled 29.05 million 20-foot equivalent units, or TEUs, in 2010 -- 500,000 TEUs more than Singapore . Shanghai's cargo throughput rose to about 650 million tons in 2010, remaining the world's largest, up from 590 million tons in 2009.

Situated in the middle of the 18,000 km-long Chinese coastline, the Shanghai port is managed by the publicly listed Shanghai International Port (Group) Co Ltd (600018.SS), which is 44.23 percent owned by the Shanghai Municipal Government.

Last May, a burst of labor disputes disrupted production for many foreign automakers including Toyota and Honda, which laid bare the rising demands of China's 150 million migrant workers and raised questions about the region's future as a low-cost manufacturing base.

(Additional reporting by Jason Subler, Jane Lee, Carlos Barria in Shanghai, Ben Blanchard, Sui-Lee Wee, Michael Martina, Niu Shuping in Beijing and Tan Ee Lyn in Hong Kong,; Writing by Ben Blanchard and Sui-Lee Wee; Editing by Don Durfee and Robert Birsel)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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PennsylvaniaHero
Warning: Educated Pollock
10:54 AM on 04/25/2011
about time china
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Soulsurfer
Solar Electrician,Longtime Surfin'Fool
09:49 AM on 04/25/2011
What it comes down to is that someone has to actually do the heavy lifting and perform the activity that produces the desired effect that will ensure the flow of capital. That someone is a 'worker', and they play a vital role, and must be compensated somewhat fairly.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DomainDiva
Aviation SaaS Entrepreneur and Technical SME
11:05 PM on 04/24/2011
Gotta love that the communists are on strike....that is such an oxymoron.
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hazyafternoonsunshine
Life's a ball, buster!
10:01 PM on 04/24/2011
Collective bargaining for Chinese workers! Dare to dream.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:36 PM on 04/24/2011
Chinas workforce and growing middle class will demand more and more pay in the future and we see what fuel cost will do to shipping cost. Lets hope some US companies decide to bring some jobs back to america..
oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
11:50 PM on 04/24/2011
i think china still subsidizes oil prices....
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Soulsurfer
Solar Electrician,Longtime Surfin'Fool
09:50 AM on 04/25/2011
Just like here in the good ol' USA.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:33 PM on 04/24/2011
We could send some Wisconsin politicians over to stop that right now...
07:51 PM on 04/24/2011
How long until the People's Liberation Army liberates these truckers of their lives?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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nofriendofrepublicans
Mother friendly.
07:23 PM on 04/24/2011
I was just about to order some chinese dry wall. ;)~
oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
11:51 PM on 04/24/2011
it has ruined many folks lives.....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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nofriendofrepublicans
Mother friendly.
06:31 AM on 04/25/2011
Who's going to pay for it?
12:32 AM on 04/24/2011
If those that believe PEAK OIL theory are correct the rising demand from China and India will soon out pace the world oil supply raising the price of oil for all.

Shipping goods around the world is going to become very expensive as oil prices rise.

Oil price inflation means inflation in ALL goods that are shipped by rail, truck, airplane or by boat.

We need to transition to safe clean alternative energy. Wind, solar, wave energy, geothermal and second generation biofuels made from algae, cellulose and waste.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ohioliberal
The Steelers and Mopar cars
07:35 PM on 04/23/2011
As a liberal I am enjoying listening to right wing talk radio as it relates to the current gas prices.

A..These hypocrites blame the GOVERNMENT for the retail prices at the pump, to that I shout back to them "enjoy your FREE MARKET forces".

B..What they expect the government to do? Nationalize the oil industry? Gasp!! a government takeover? bigger and bigger government? isn't that what they are against? Such hypocrites!!

C..And to those "Drill baby Drill" idiots, remember all oil pumped out of the ground in this country is by private industry who will ALWAYS sell their product to the highest bidder that day (e.g. India / China / Europe). If there was oil rigs on the White House lawn there is an better than even chance that it would be sold and exported to an foreign higher bidder.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
becky bradshaw
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth
11:00 AM on 04/24/2011
A.,B., If manipulation of the market price is "free-market", then you are correct. It is troubling that there is legislation (H.R. 1) proposed to ensure manipulation, and higher oil prices continue.
http://climateprogress.org/2011/03/19/speculation-oil-prices-watchdog/

P.S.: http://wn.com/Slavery_in_Modern_China
09:06 AM on 04/23/2011
When thinking of China, we often forget that at its core is a Communist reality and a country where well over half the citizens live a life of poverty and currency devaluation is creating an inflationary bubble of epic proportions. Before we annoint the country as the role model for capitalist growth, we should remember that history would seem to indicate that there is a revolution still to come for this country............and it will not be pretty when it inevitably occurs.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
12:52 PM on 04/23/2011
Chinese currency is appreciating, not depreciating.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ohioliberal
The Steelers and Mopar cars
07:23 PM on 04/23/2011
with serious governmental manipulation - you left that key out!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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08:19 AM on 04/23/2011
Hmm, someone's organizing a trucking strike in Shanghai. I wonder where the Chinese government will disappear another Chinese dissident next...
12:37 PM on 04/23/2011
Fear not. They will make nice displays for the next "Bodies" exhibit ignorant Americans will pay to go see.
12:44 PM on 04/23/2011
No I think they will have not body parts to auction off on the internet. I say that program on how they execute prisoners by shooting them so that they can the most body parts. Sick.
But I also remember the bloody Cultural Revolution, and yes there is another one to come.
It may be one of the most populated nations on the planet and the poor are in the majority.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
12:53 PM on 04/23/2011
Kind of destroys that old saw about no dissent allowed in China, doesn't it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
07:25 AM on 04/23/2011
A Globalized World Economy is turning out to be a great thing for those lowest third worlders as new growth in their economies provides them the opportunity to get in on the American Dream, the downside? shrinking economies in the have nations such as America, Eventually all workers everywhere will "enjoy" the same qualities of life, For China that is a step up, for America? a mighty big drop.
02:56 AM on 04/23/2011
I'm surprised this article isn't getting more attention when gas prices are strangling average workers across the globe. While speculators sit back and rake in the dough people like long haul truckers here in the U.S. and these truckers in China have to make the real decision on if it is worth it to fill their 100 gallon tanks to haul goods making someone else rich.
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irochfpst
no right turn
12:11 AM on 04/23/2011
next thing you know they will want to form a union. what a crazy idea. i hope americans are paying attention. products from china will soon cost more . if you are a worker, at some point you are going to realize you are being screwed. then you won't have a choice but to fight back. maybe we will witness the emergence of global unions. then what will the rich do.?