Fears about Australia’s supply chain problems may finally be bearing fruit. Shortages of a fuel additive called AdBlue have sparked panic buying, threatening to bring trucks to a halt at one of the busiest times of year.
AdBlue is added to engines to reduce nitrous oxides, and is required for the operation of most diesel trucks. No trucks means no transportation of essential goods, which would have serious consequences for commerce and industry. There are fears supplies could even run out before Christmas.
The movement of goods has already been slow due to high demand during COVID, and compounding factors could create serious delays.
Why is there a shortage?
The shortage of AdBlue stems from China’s ban on exports of the chemical compound known as urea, a key component. But this is not just another geopolitical trade war — there are also domestic issues at play. Urea is also used in fertilisers, which have recently seen a price spike so China — from where 80% of Australia’s supply comes — has begun stockpiling it.
There could be serious consequences for Australia because most freight trucks require the additive. Trucks off the road could spark a chain reaction that delays movement of goods, resulting in higher prices for consumers.
What’s being done?
Australia has some reserves of the product but there are fears there won’t be enough. Energy Minister Angus Taylor assured businesses that shipments are en route, and that there’s enough to last five weeks. This would see trucking through until January and provide sufficient breathing room to get on top of the shortage.
Even if this is true and Australia dodges the bullet, the question remains: is Australia doing enough to strengthen its supply chains?
David Leaney, management consultant and lecturer at the ANU college of business and economics, says Australia’s supply chain issues were coming to a head.
“Sometimes there’s shortages of the product because production has been impacted by COVID, or other market-based impact, such as with AdBlue,” he said. “Sometimes it’s the logistics, such as when you can’t get the shipping containers themselves and you can’t move the stock you have.”
Leaney gave examples of shortages of niche medical supplies like asthma puffers and epipens, and Australia’s vulnerability to petrol shortages, despite some contingencies being in place.
Louise McGrath, head of policy at the Australian Industry Group, says the complexity of supply chains makes it difficult to predict where the next shortage will emerge, pointing to the Productivity Commission’s report on vulnerable supply chains earlier this year that didn’t identify urea as an issue.
“The commission dedicated great minds and many hours into investigating what are our most vulnerable supply chains, and they didn’t identify this,” she said.
What more could we do?
Leaney suggests that developing sovereign industrial capability priorities may be a way to ensure Australia has the “things we need to be self-reliant”. This would require major policy intervention to counteract the cheaper market options found overseas.
McGrath says most companies tackle supply chain issues by increasing their inventories. But this wasn’t always easy.
“We’re a small market and there needs to be a whole ecosystem around a product to make it worthwhile to produce,” she said.
News of the shortage creates more panic and exacerbates the initial problem.
“That’s the number one strategy for businesses, which means there’s further shortages,” McGrath said.
Like the panic buying that lead to shortages of toilet paper at the start of the pandemic, Leaney says the visibility of AdBlue, which is sold in shops such as Supercheap Auto, contributes to stockpiling.
“When people go to the store to pick something up and it’s not there, worries of a shortage end up causing a shortage, and a bit of human behaviour comes into it.”
I read an article the other day that went into some interesting detail about Chinese urea production.
It requires large amounts of natural gas to produce it, and the Chinese are paying top dollar. Australia is supplying China with natural gas at this premium price.
Meanwhile in Oz, our Urea production facility in Qld is closing down because….wait for it….it can’t source natural gas because it’s all gone for export!
We are the authors of our own AdBlue shortage!!!
A classic case of the “invisible and self-correcting hand of the marketplace ” working in ways we’d probably rather it didn’t.
Do you mind linking the article?
I would if i could, but i read it a few days ago, on my FB feed. It was a fair dinkum article though, not a ranty FB thing. Probably from the Guardian or IA. I will have a look and see if i can find it, it was a good article.
https://www.incitecpivot.com.au/about-us/about-incitec-pivot-limited/media/gibson-island-manufacturing-operations-to-cease-at-end-of-2022
There wa something in the paper SMH from memory and also on the ABC in terms of PIvot fertilizers, the only urea manufacturer literally running out of gas.
Found it! https://theaimn.com/angus-taylor-makes-no-sense/?fbclid=IwAR1ZXJDzm4WJSbr9yRjwV5J93rEHAWCG93pwm8wwfhFOdSTGuv6B9ZZpNrY
Look up “Haber Process” for the production of ammonia and its compounds, using oodles of methane gas. Mount Isa used to make its explosives using methane piped from the coast, but elsewhere such as Dampier it is made nearer to gas fields. Andrew Forrest is exploring “green ammonia” which could conceivably be made from electrolytic hydrogen.
We should have known: you can’t take the piss out of China.
Of course if we had started to pivot to electric transport, rather than propping up diesel, this would be less of a problem
If there were sufficient electric turcks commercially available. Which there aren’t.
And so far they are all short or medium range trucks. Not the long-haul freight trucks that frequent Australia’s highways.
It would be better, too, if we had a well developed freight rail network.
One of the neglected assets of a rail network is easements – ideal for vast solar arrays to run the electric trains, esp in far flung regions.
I would dispute there aren’t enough electric trucks available. They’re all over Europe these days, from small to very large. French Post has over 35,000 EVs of all types. That said, they won’t be viable here until the govt gets behind a comprehensive charging station program, which of course they won’t.
Many of the 35,000 EVs are electrically assisted bicycles, and 3 and 4 wheel delivery vehicles.
There are also some vans, like the Renault Kangoo EV.
Not exactly an example of long range heavy duty haulage.
Daimler Benz have a couple of short/mid range trucks – a semi and a box truck – that have been in fleet testing in the US. So not full production yet.
Volvo has several models, but has only just started producing a heavy duty semi for the North American market. That truck has a range less than 250km.
The Tesla semi is nowhere to be seen at this stage.
PS I looked up the Volvo trucks Australian site and saw a big picture of Smirko sitting at the wheel of a truck.
If we relied more on rail for long-distance freight transport, it’d probably be less of an issue too.
WTF? Urea is trivial to make, even in large quantities. It does not require anything that we haven’t got in abundance, it doesn’t even require much industrial infrastructure. Are we really that type of primitive banana republic that beyond flogging off what we dug out of the ground we are just too incompetent to do anything else? I’d wish I’d live in a smart country, not merely in a “lucky country” which solely relies on the sheer dumb luck of sitting on a large pile of precious natural resources (without knowing what to do with it)
Be very worried if &ga$, sorry, Angus Taylor is involved;
‘Energy Minister Angus Taylor assured businesses that shipments are en route, and that there’s enough to last five weeks. This would see trucking through until January and provide sufficient breathing room to get on top of the shortage.’
Since Angus has so generously sold every passenger car and tradies ute owner that uses AdBlue (Diesel Emission Fluid) up the creek by stitching up a deal so tight with the transportation industry – what hope do us owners and users of Euro 6 diesel cars have of obtaining AdBlue when we run out.
It seems the AdBlue shipment Angus is claiming as a victory for “business” will leave a shipload of motorists across the country high and dry when we run out of AdBlue over Christmas and the New Year all thanks to Angus looking after his mates and forgetting about the voters who put him there;
Australian AdBlue manufacturer charters planes ready to fly in emergency urea as diesel additive crisis continues – ABC News
Urea is quite simple to make; it is just ammonia plus carbon dioxide. Farmers used to use that chemical, CO(NH2)2 for its nitrogen content but have long since converted to the odourless ammonium nitrate, NH4NO3. Confusingly, farmers still use the term “urea”, even when using it to blow up tree stumps.