China remains the world’s factory, but slower domestic demand and global diversification are reshaping cargo flows.
China’s export growth moderated through 2025 as global consumer demand stabilised and Western buyers accelerated “China+1” sourcing strategies. Production of low-margin goods is increasingly shifting toward Vietnam, India and Indonesia, while China continues to dominate higher-value manufacturing and industrial supply chains.
These structural changes are influencing shipping patterns. Carriers are adjusting capacity across North Asia while increasing service frequency into Southeast Asia. Port rotations, feeder connections and equipment repositioning strategies are evolving to match shifting cargo flows.
Why Australia Is Feeling the Effects
Australia remains heavily reliant on China for manufactured imports. When production cycles slow or export volumes fluctuate, shipping lines may reduce sailings or reallocate equipment, tightening container availability.
During peak demand periods — particularly pre-Lunar New Year or major retail cycles — equipment shortages can develop quickly across China–Australia routes.
Operational Impact for SMEs
Importers may experience:
- blank sailings or reduced sailing frequency
- rolling of bookings during peak periods
- container imbalances between North and South China ports
- short-term freight rate swings linked to demand cycles
At the same time, suppliers relocating partial production to Southeast Asia may alter transit times and routing patterns.
Strategic Actions for Businesses
Monitor supplier production shifts and origin ports
Allow extra lead time around seasonal shutdowns and peak demand
Consider multi-country sourcing to reduce disruption risk
Confirm container availability early during peak cycles
China remains indispensable to Australia’s supply chain but shifting production and trade flows are changing shipping dynamics. Importers who plan proactively and diversify sourcing will be better positioned to manage volatility.
Source: UNCTAD global trade outlook; Asia manufacturing relocation analysis (2026).
Disclaimer – Market data is from public sources we consider reliable but has not been independently verified; accuracy is not guaranteed