Strong Winds & Swell Slow Vessel Movements on Australia’s East Coast

Choppy Seas Ahead: Wild Weather Causes Delays from Brisbane to Melbourne

Unfavourable weather conditions along Australia’s east coast — including strong winds, heavy swell and intermittent fog — have slowed vessel arrivals at Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne over the past week. Several carriers have confirmed minor anchorage delays as pilots temporarily suspended operations during peak wind periods, creating small but noticeable disruptions to berthing windows.

The impact is already filtering through the supply chain. Importers waiting on consumer goods, machinery, building materials and FMCG are seeing ETAs shift by 12–36 hours, enough to disrupt inland delivery schedules and transport slot planning.

For exporters, the knock-on effect is tighter receival times and reduced flexibility, particularly for time-sensitive perishables and reefers requiring strict handover timing.

Transport operators say the weather-related slowdowns are adding pressure to already busy booking windows as carriers bunch arrivals into narrower timeframes after weather clears. Although the delays remain manageable, consecutive days of poor conditions could build compounding congestion at east-coast terminals.

 How Aussie Shippers Can Stay Ahead

  • Expect 12–36 hour ETA variance for east-coast arrivals.
  • Reconfirm truck slot bookings daily during severe weather periods.
  • Exporters should deliver containers earlier to avoid cut-off changes.
  • Build modest safety stock for fast-moving imports.


Source: Australian port operational weather notices & carrier schedule updates
Disclaimer – Market data is from public sources we consider reliable but has not been independently verified; accuracy is not guaranteed

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