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IP: Crunch Time for Y2K Suppliers
From: [email protected]
Subject: IP: Crunch Time for Y2K Suppliers
Date: Thu, 05 Nov 1998 11:22:46 -0600
To: [email protected]
Source: Wired
http://www.wired.com/news/news/politics/story/16035.html?3
Crunch Time for Y2K Suppliers
by Declan McCullagh
4:00 a.m.5.Nov.98.PST
The phones are already ringing when Steve
Portela arrives at his office every morning.
Orders are piling up as they never have before.
Walton Feed, his bulk food company, doubled
its workforce this year to 125 people and a new
warehouse will open in late November.
It isn't enough. Orders placed today won't be
delivered for six months.
"I'm falling further behind every day," Portela
complains.
The source of Portela's woes? Widespread
worries about the Year 2000 computer problem.
The looming bug has sent thousands of
Americans scrambling to load up on bulk food,
generators, solar cells, and gold coins. Some of
the products, if ordered today, won't arrive on a
customer's doorstep until spring 1999. And
delays are expected to grow.
Spikes in demand are nothing new to Portela.
The Mount St. Helens eruption, the Los Angeles
riots, and the last major California earthquake all
spurred people into grabbing their credit cards
and phoning Walton Feed. From a perch 6,000
feet up in the Idaho mountains, the company
has grown into one of the nation's largest bulk
food suppliers.
But nervous jitters caused by those disruptions
are peanuts compared to growing fears that Y2K
will snarl electric power, telecommunications,
and the banking system.
"Add it all together, and Y2K surpasses
everything," Portela says.
This time it's not just survivalists stockpiling
sealed barrels from Walton's extensive selection
of wheat, rice, and other dried foods.
"It's common everyday folks, people just like
you," Portela says of his customers. "We're not
talking about any radical people."
Other food companies have similar bellyaches.
"The demand is amazing -- 99.99 percent of the
people we deal with are preparing for Y2K," says
Tamera Toups, office manager for
Montana-based Peace of Mind Essentials."
Unlike Walton's, Peace of Mind Essentials
doesn't boast a storeroom full of towering bins of
grain. Instead, it places orders that are later
filled by warehouses. Toups estimates volume
has leapt 500 percent this year.
"If anyone doesn't have an order in by the end of
April, their chances of getting it before 2000 are
pretty slim," she said. "The window might be
even smaller than that."
You'll still be able to buy bulk food after next
April, of course. America Inc., a food exporter,
has plenty of it. But Walton Feed makes a niche
product prized by Y2Kers: sealed 50-pound
drums of food with the oxygen removed, a
process that delays spoilage and eliminates
grain-munching critters. A year's supply tips the
scales at 600 pounds and costs $300, plus
shipping.
Trying to procure a diesel generator, on the other
hand, is shaping up to be increasingly difficult.
Loren Day, president of China Diesel Imports,
spends a good portion of each day puzzling out
how to crank out more and more generators to
meet a swell of Y2K orders. Shipments of his
company's most popular 8,000-watt model are
already running six months behind.
"Orders are up about 1,000 percent since the
first of the year," Day says. "And the amount of
people who will want a generator now is nothing
compared to the amount of people who will want
a generator later."
Day, whose 50-person company is the largest
US distributor of diesel generators, usually sells
to rural customers who live beyond the reach of
electric power lines.
"Now with this Y2K thing it's gone crazy," he
said. He said he now has the both of the world's
largest generator manufacturers running at near
capacity to satisfy US demand.
Why don't Y2Kers simply pick up a $500
gasoline generator at Home Depot or their local
hardware store? Day believes they're so worried
about the oft-criticized reliability of the portable
units, that they're willing to pay diesel prices,
starting at $1,750.
"The main thing is the longevity and fuel
economy of the diesel," he said. Diesel fuel is
an oil, so it keeps longer than gasoline, which
spoils after a year.
Those Y2K consumers who dread running out of
fuel are also turning to renewable energy.
"We're totally swamped by Y2K," said Laura
Myers, a sales representative for solar
equipment distributor Sunelco. "We're beginning
to see some lead times on some of our
products. By next spring it's going to be insane."
Sales at the Hamilton, Montana-based Sunelco
have tripled because of Y2K, Myers said. She
predicts that orders placed after next spring
won't arrive until 2000.
"It's been a huge increase," said Davy Rippner, a
vice president at Alternative Energy Engineering,
a California-based firm.
"The things that we're out of and we can't keep
in stock are the Baygen [hand-cranked] radios
and the Russian-made hand-dynamo
flashlights."
Then there are the full-blown home solar
systems, which start at $3,000 and can range
up to $30,000.
"A lot of small installers around the country that
have been struggling to make a living are now
booked for months in advance," said Karen
Perez, who publishes Home Power magazine
with her husband Richard from the couple's
off-the-grid home outside of Ashland, Oregon.
The Perez family won't do anything to prepare for
Y2K -- except spend time handling the sharp
uptick in recent subscriptions to their magazine.
"We're six miles from the nearest phone and
power line," she said. "As far as Y2K with us,
the only thing that I'm planning on doing
personally is getting a stash of non-hybrid
seeds."
Non-hybrid seeds are particularly prized by
Y2Kers who stay up nights worrying that
potential widespread computer crashes could
disrupt food distribution. Most hardware store
seeds are hybrid varieties. They grow well, but
they can be sterile.
Since seeds from hybrid plants may not
germinate, some Y2Kers are stockpiling the
non-hybrid varieties.
"[We've been] getting calls about bulk seeds and
buying in quantities and packing them for
storage for some period of time," said Dave
Smith, vice president of Seeds of Change in
Santa Fe, New Mexico.
"We definitely think that there will be an
increase in sales because of this problem."
Burt Blumert doesn't need to speculate. The
Burlingame, California, company he owns,
Camino Coin, has seen sales of precious metal
coins double from last year because of Y2K
jitters. "It's widespread now," Blumert said.
In May, Blumert began to run ads for a "Y2K Life
Preserver," a $3,500 collection of coins that
includes British gold sovereigns, silver dollars,
and pre-1965 silver dimes and quarters.
He markets the collection as a kind of financial
Y2K insurance policy, just in case banking
glitches or more widespread problems call for a
permanent currency.
"When people buy gold, they're dropping out,"
he said. "This is the ultimate dropout, when the
institutions themselves aren't working."
Copyright � 1994-98 Wired Digital Inc.
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