Delivery of groceries to British shops expected to be unaffected by disruption due to ash
According to official reports, a ban on flights in Britain because of volcanic ash means shortages of medicine, cut flowers and exotic fruit and vegetables, but not groceries.
Dust from the Eyjafjallajokull Volcano in southern Iceland has closed airports across much of Europe and canceled most trans-Atlantic travel.
The stock for clothing retailers is sitting in holding pens overseas waiting to be flown to Britain, the Daily Telegraph has reported.
It was also noted that air freight accounts for 25 percent of the country's movement of international goods.
The cost to business and consumers will rise, the Freight Transport Association said.
"Even when airspace opens up we are looking at a backlog. It will take 48 hours to sort out as a lot of carriers now have their aircraft mispositioned across the globe. Where clothing is concerned it could take two weeks to clear the backlog," Grant Liddell, retail director of Uniserve Group, the British private logistics provider, said.
However, the problem does not extend to groceries.
"Less than 1 percent of what we sell comes into the U. K. via air. At the moment there is no impact and we have enough stock. We are keeping a very close eye in it at the moment," a spokesman for Tesco, the retail grocery chain, told the newspaper.
"We don't have much of a problem. Where we do import fruit by air it tends to be exotic fruit. We have a good stock at the moment," a spokesman for the British supermarket chain Asda told The Daily Telegraph. (With Inputs from Agencies)