Multiple companies in Zhejiang province have suspended operations due to COVID-19 outbreak, halting production of goods from batteries and clothing to textile dyes and plastics.
Zhejiang is one of China’s biggest and busiest manufacturing hubs. The local government has imposed restrictions on movement until March 2022 in the cities of Hangzhou, Shaoxing and Ningbo, reports Reuters.
At least 20 listed companies including Zhejiang Mustang Battery Co., Guobang Pharma Ltd. and textile dyes maker Zhejiang Runtu Co. have shut operations in virus-hit areas in Zhejiang, which accounts for around 6% of China’s GDP.
The city of Ningbo, home to one of the world’s largest container ports, has already tightened entry, raising concerns about disruptions.
According to MedicalExpress, the shutdown of Zhejiang factories will impact on the supply chains of various sectors, especially fibre and textiles. The flare-up could take up to 40 days to subside, with manufacturers possibly resuming work only after the Lunar New Year holiday in February.
At the same time, Omicron-variant cases were discovered in Tianjin and Guangzhou, causing new lockdowns in these areas, reports Financial Times.
CNN questions the effectiveness of China’s “zero-Covid” approach, which involves aggressively locking down neighborhoods, cities and entire regions in response to just one or two cases. Prior shutdowns in major economic hubs have snarled shipping ports and stunted global supply chains.
More Amazon news
Former Amazon executive on the 5-star rating system
Amazon rating system developers ended up being too protective of it According to the former Amazon executive, the online ratings and reviews model was a good solution at first, but the team ended up being too protective of it. Dan Lewis spent many years at...
Nike stops selling its products on Amazon
Nike is just ‘tip of the iceberg’ of companies ditching Amazon Nike’s decision to stop selling merchandise to Amazon is the start of brands opting to go directly to consumers, says internet entrepreneur Tim Armstrong. “The direct-to-consumer movement will...
Unsafe products on Amazon mostly come from Chinese sellers
Amazon recruits more Chinese sellers and puts consumers at risk The Wall Street Journal takes a look at the rising number of Chinese sellers on Amazon and the problems they make The percentage of China-based sellers directly supplying products on Amazon...