South Korea has bolstered its measures in response to rising freight rates, to mitigate the impact of rising tensions in the Red Sea on maritime logistics.
The country's trade, industry and energy ministry (Motie) outlined a three-stage support plan on 25 January, which will be escalated according to the Shanghai Containerised Freight Index, with the current situation pegged at stage one and the relevant measures to be implemented immediately.
The first stage involves raising the cap on logistics support for exporters from the current 20mn won ($14,970) to W30mn. Motie will also secure additional inventories in advance in Europe and the Americas, and increase the number of vessels available exclusively to small and medium sized companies by over 40pc.
Asian clean tanker freight rates have also been rising for prompt naphtha supplies from the Mideast Gulf, because of mounting Red Sea tensions.
"Logistics disruptions in the Middle East are highly likely to be prolonged with increased uncertainty as the interests of multiple countries are complexly intertwined," said Motie minister Jeong In-kyo. But the situation's direct impact on export shipments remains limited and the energy supply situation remains normal, Motie said. South Korea's key exports are automobiles, semiconductors, and batteries, while it relies almost entirely on imports to meet its oil and gas needs.
The ministry will implement second-stage measures if freight rates continue rising, such as tapping on the W3.1bn it previously earmarked for export vouchers in July-December. If freight rates increase further because of prolonged logistics disruptions, Motie will review measures to expand support through consultation with relevant ministries.
"We plan to minimise the negative impact on the upward trend in exports by establishing appropriate risk management measures and doing our best to resolve business difficulties through close monitoring," Jeong said.
The additional measures come shortly after South Korea's initial measures to minimise Red Sea export disruptions earlier in January. Tensions in the Red Sea region have since escalated, with Yemen's Houthi militants most recently firing missiles at a container ship on 24 January.

