Ocean shipping is like having a giant toy boat that carries your toys across the ocean to your friend’s house.
Ships are like big trucks on water, they carry containers, which are like big boxes full of stuff, like toys, food, or clothes. These containers stack up high, like building blocks, and travel from one place to another.
How It Works
Imagine you're playing with a toy boat in the bathtub. You put all your favorite toys inside it and push it across the tub, that’s how ships move stuff from one country to another. The containers get loaded onto the ship, which sails through the ocean until it reaches its destination.
Why It's Broken
Sometimes, things go wrong, just like when you spill water on your floor and your toy boat gets stuck. Ships might be delayed because of bad weather or traffic in the sea. Also, the cost of moving these containers can get really high, kind of like when you have to pay a lot for extra toys at the store.
It's broken because it’s like having too many toy boats trying to cross the same bathtub, they all get stuck and take longer to reach their destination.
Examples
- A big ship full of boxes goes from one country to another, but sometimes it gets stuck in a port because there are too many ships.
- The price of things you buy might go up if the ships take longer to arrive.
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See also
- Why are global shipping costs still so high?
- What causes port congestion?
- How to Fix Broken Supply Chains | Dustin Burke | TED?
- How Does Goods Receiving Procedure Work?
- How Does Two Minute Explainer: Global Supply Chains Work?