In 2021, Resilinc, a leading global supply chain monitoring and risk management firm that has been tracking disruptions at manufacturing plants for over a decade, was prompted to create a WarRoom to track the sudden uptick of supply chain disruptions. The company issued 11,642 to alerts notifying its, which include today's largest multinational organizations, about supply chain disruption.
Manufacturing plants aren't accidentally getting destroyed in the United States
- More factory fires occurred in 2021 than any year in recorded history
- Nearly a quarter of the supply chain disruptions globally were attributed to manufacturing plants being set aflame
- The uptick is due mostly to gaps in regulatory and process execution as well as shortage of skilled labor in warehouses
- Factory fires are contributing to record breaking supply shortages
- Workers around the world were forced to leave work when the pandemic hit amid COVID lockdowns and vaccine mandates and have yet to return to factories
Bottom Line
- Irrigation water was canceled in California, and storage water flushed directly to the delta
The string of fires that continue to damage manufacturing plants across the United States appears to be a deliberate effort to sabotage food processing operations
- According to the FBI’s Cyber Division, cyber-attack threats on agricultural cooperatives are an imminent threat
- A significant disruption of grain production could impact the entire food chain, since grain is not only consumed by humans but also used for animal feed.
No comments:
Post a Comment