Business interruption risks continue in 2024

According to Allianz, businesses are most likely to develop alternative suppliers when working to de-risk supply chains.

Companies are confident that the worst of two key disruptors of recent times, the pandemic and the energy crisis, are behind them. However, business interruption remains a key concern as firms are challenged to build resilience and diversify supply chains in a rapidly changing world. Credit: jozefmicic/Adobe Stock

Business interruption (BI) ranks second in the Allianz Risk Barometer 2024, an annual survey that asks more than 3,000 risk management experts around the world to identify their top business challenges for the year ahead, behind the closely linked peril of cyber.

It ranks among the top three risks for companies of all different sizes surveyed, and is the second biggest concern in the Americas, Europe, Asia Pacific, and Africa and Middle East regions. With almost all companies reliant on supply chains for critical products and services, it is little surprise that business interruption and supply chain disruption remain at the forefront of risk. It is the extent of the disruption that becomes the focus point. Some sectors of industry operate with supply chains that have extensive geographic footprints.

The prominence of BI also reflects the volatile environment that companies currently operate in. Despite efforts to improve resilience, the need for efficiency means many companies still run with low levels of stock and just-in-time manufacturing, which results in little margin for errors or disruption.

More resilient supply chains/?

COVID-19 and the resulting disruption to supply chains were a wake-up call for companies. Compared with pre-pandemic times, many companies are now much better prepared for business interruption or supply chain events.

Before COVID-19, companies were generally reactive to events, but now they are much more aware of critical threats and the need to diversify and protect critical points. Awareness of business interruption and supply chain vulnerabilities makes a business better prepared and able to react in a smarter and more informed manner.

According to the Allianz Risk Barometer results, businesses are most likely to develop alternative suppliers (60% of responses) when taking action to de-risk supply chains, followed by improving business continuity management (42%) and identifying and remediating supply chain bottlenecks (37%).

However, smaller companies and those in specialist and high-value industries are more limited in what they can do to diversify their supply chains. Businesses may still have a number of options to mitigate their exposure. This may include changing the business model. If this is not viable, there may be options to reconfigure the supply chain — some sectors are heavily concentrated on a small number of suppliers. For others, the cost of increasing redundancy or relocating suppliers is just too great.

Causes of most concern

Cyber incidents and natural catastrophes are the top two causes of BI feared most by companies, followed by fire, and machinery/equipment breakdown or failure. However, almost any peril can cause disruption. BI is closely related to many of the other top global risks in this year’s Allianz Risk Barometer, such as climate change, political risks and violence, skills shortages, energy crisis and the impact of new technologies to name but a few.

The global risk landscape is constantly changing, with climate change, digitalization, and geopolitics. Some risks lie dormant, but a significant enough change in geopolitics or events such as extreme weather patterns can very quickly change the predominant risks.

The recent disruption in the Red Sea — a vital trade route between Europe and Asia – due to Houthi rebel attacks on vessels is the latest risk to hit supply chains. More than 400 container ships were diverted via the Cape of Good Hope around the southern tip of Africa between mid-December 2023 and the beginning of January 2024, prolonging journeys and causing delays to the delivery of products.

That said, natural disasters and fire and explosion are notable for their potential to generate large BI losses and supply chain disruption. Severe flooding in Slovenia in August gave rise to one of the biggest supply chain events of 2023, causing production delays and parts shortages for European car manufacturers.

Emerging supply chain risks

Companies also named BI as their top business concern about climate change impacts in this year’s survey. However, BI related to climate change goes further than just physical damage from storms and floods. Extreme weather or climate events can have a widespread impact, causing economic hardship and political and social upheaval, as well as disrupting logistics and production.

For example, a severe drought restricted transits through the Panama shipping canal in the last months of 2023, causing congestion and delays of up to two weeks.

Climate change is also having an indirect effect, as decarbonization creates new supply chains.

Dr. Marianna Grammatika of Allianz Risk Consulting. Credit: Courtesy photo

Emerging supply chains linked to the energy transition have already been identified as geographically concentrated as they depend on elements that can only be found in a select number of regions in the world. Countries are looking to secure critical supplies of technology and rare earth elements required to power transition technology like electric cars and enable renewable energy sources like solar panels.

Geopolitical risks are of growing concern for businesses in emerging energy and technology supply chains, as well as high-value sectors like technology and artificial intelligence. Producers of rare earth elements are often found in the most underdeveloped and politically volatile areas.

Mitigation — keep up to date

In a fast-changing world, companies need to maintain regular audits of systems and to test their business continuity plans. There are always organizational changes in companies, and people move. There needs to be systems in place to manage change.

If a company hasn’t implemented business continuity management (BCM), then they should carry out a business impact analysis and risk assessment. For those that have already embedded BCM into the business, it is vital they regularly check, update and test these plans, otherwise they won’t be able to react when the crisis starts.

Based in the U.K., Marianna Grammatika is regional head of Allianz Risk Consulting for London and Nordics.

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