HCB Magazine April 2020

Page 3

UP FRONT  01

EDITOR’S LETTER

Talk about bad timing… Only last month in this column I was

just ill health but also public panic and fears about the supply

exhorting you all to escape the confines of your offices and

of everyday necessities – food, water, toilet paper and all the

get out to meet your customers and colleagues at the many

other niceties of modern life. How will those goods get to the

spring conferences and exhibitions that were coming up.

stores if delivery drivers are ill or self-isolating? How will

Barely was the ink dry on the March issue when the

those stores be staffed?

Covid-19 coronavirus outbreak in China went global and,

Furthermore, the global economy was already delicate –

as I write this, we are getting daily reports of events being

in this issue we report on the financial results of a number of

postponed or cancelled.

the major chemical distributors, which all talk about a global

Event organisers are obviously not keen to take such a

macroeconomic slowdown in 2019, particularly in the mature

drastic step: there is a lot of money tied up in a big show. But

markets in North America and Europe. It seems inevitable

at the same time companies are not keen to expose their staff

that a medical crisis on this scale – all around the world at

to risks and we are hearing that many are already restricting

the same time – will have a major adverse impact on demand

business travel, reducing exhibitor and visitor numbers.

for all manner of goods and services, and the logistics chains

That is bad news financially for hotels, conference venues

that supply them. Already the oil tanker markets are in

and event organisers, but also for airlines, airport operators

turmoil as a result of a slump in demand for road fuels in

and the staff who work for them. There has already been one

China as people stay at home more, while empty containers

airline go into administration in the UK and analysts predict

(and tank containers) are stacking up at Chinese ports for

that, if the epidemic persists, others could follow.

lack of cargo.

But, just as Covid-19 is a threat primarily to those with

Even now, talk is beginning to turn to what sort of

underlying medical conditions, then it also seems to be a

long-term impact the Covid-19 epidemic will have on the

threat primarily to those companies with underlying financial

world once it is all over. Will it signal an end to globalisation,

issues. And, as the situation is so fluid, by the time this issue

as consumers and businesses switch to more local supplies?

of HCB reaches you, there may well have been more

Or will it, conversely, make people more aware of the

corporate casualties.

inescapable inter-connectedness of the world? And what

For those in the supply chain, events such as the Covid-19 outbreak bring immense stresses. There are some obvious

will that mean for politics and global economics? We shall see – or at least I hope we shall. We might have

issues in terms of the supply of medicines, personal protective

to avoid all that hand-shaking at conferences, though. Now

equipment and testing equipment, as well as in the disposal

wash your hands…

of infectious waste. But this epidemic is bringing with it not

Peter Mackay

WWW.HCBLIVE.COM


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