Independent journal on economy and transport policy
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ANNO XXXVIII - Numero FEBBRAIO 2020
TRANSPORT AND ENVIRONMENT
KEY TRENDS GOING INTO 2020
"COMMENT: Never is there a better time than the turn of the
year to do a Crtl+Alt+Del, writes Charles Haine."
We hurtled towards the festive break in the vapour trail of a
2019, characterised by geopolitical noise and trade squabbles at the
global level and ever-increasing speedy logistics closer to home.
Who didn't use the internet to order presents last year?
We are seeing an era of big change. Trends in our consultancy
commissions at WSP drop monster hints about what's occurring in the
wider world of trade, ports and port-cities.
In January, Larry Fink, Chairman at Blackrock, made a seismic
announcement. They're putting climate-risk analysis at the heart of
future investment strategies. They're invested in over $630bn of
assets.
The Bank of England also announced that seven lenders will
'stress test' the climate resilience of their investments. It's
coming - fossil fuel-related projects will be on the wane. Lenders
are proactively looking to support cleaner developments.
Leading on from that, business influencers - such as the
Aldersgate Group - are calling for mandatory TCFD (task force on
climate-related financial disclosures, the 2017 Michael Bloomberg
initiative) reporting from all companies. This will require
publication of decisions and forward-thinking on climate risks and
opportunities in directors' reports.
'Mitigation' (GHG emission reductions), 'adaptation' (becoming
more resilient to the 50-70 years of climate hurt we are already
locked into) and 'transition risks' associated with the global push
to net zero are included in that.
Inherently connected to these, products for insuring liability
in the insurance world are evolving. Talking to professionals in
that sector, the thinking is that we might be close to a company
going down as a result of negative market responses to
green-washing. That's where a company's misleads customers about the
environmental or climate credentials of its products/services.
Just watch the adverts between TV programmes to witness examples
of such oxymoronic claims. Post-IMO 2020, tremors from the new
low-sulphur fuel regulations in maritime shipping may have knock-on
effects on broader-ranging fuel and efficiency programmes in the
supply chain.
Coupled with the public health outrage of poor air quality, this
could affect rail, road and river transport. CNG Fuels is the
leading supplier of bio-CNG (compressed natural gas) sourced 100%
from renewable biomethane.
It cuts GHG emissions by 85% and costs 45% less. Two haulage
companies are using it in the UK, so in this net zero era - what's
the business and reputational case for using diesel now?
There's a food revolution underway as our understanding of the
health implications of eating processed foods is starting to bite.
Ordering, transport and the stocking strategies of retailers will
shift.
Quorn (Greggs' vegan sausage roll anyone?) is the first major
brand to declare it will publish a carbon label. That'll be a
challenge for shipping although less so for ports, which contribute
only a fraction of the carbon footprint. Many people I know have
stopped buying fruit and vegetables from far flung locations. People
are talking about carbon miles vociferously.
Ethical supply chains will gain more publicity in 2020. You can
add to the sizzling skillet above more scrutiny and an evidence base
in manufacture and transportation without traces of child labour,
payment at living wages and decent working conditions.
Might we see apps using blockchain capturing environmental,
social, carbon and sustainability data? I think it's just a case who
wants to lead on that. Port and terminal operators are evolving into
the smarter ways of working, using widgets, add-ons and plug-ins to
allow compatibility in existing digital platforms.
This is in cargo handling through to workforce training, which,
in turn, will include upskilling on digitisation itself. We will see
increased automation (where there is a labour supply crunch),
machine-learning and use of AI to accelerate decision-making.
Expect to see more outsourcing and partnerships in the supply
chain as companies realise specialists can perform certain functions
faster and cheaper. Good news for port-city relationships.
With mayors and city organisations taking a lead on climate
resilience and being future-ready, we will see chances to support -
or at least consider - more community and citizen-driven ideas and
innovation.
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