Quotidiano indipendente di economia e politica dei trasporti
07:31 GMT+2
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE STUDI CONTAINERS
ANNO XXXVIII - Numero LUGLIO 2020
ROAD TRANSPORT
COVID OVERTAKES DRIVER SHORTAGE AS HIGHEST HURDLE FOR
EUROPEAN ROAD FREIGHT
The Covid crisis has hit forwarders specialising in European
road transport, particularly those working in the automotive and
construction sectors.
Previous issues such as driver shortages and Brexit pale in
comparison with the lack of volumes and low pricing in the current
market.
Only 32% of forwarders expect revenues to grow this year,
against 67% last year, according to the European Road Transportation
survey by Transporeon, of more than 1,200 freight forwarders.
Some 38% expect a decline in turnover, against 10% last year,
and nearly half of the chemicals, construction and automotive
industries (45%, 48% and 47% respectively) are expecting declines
this year.
Transporeon
Some 77% are seeing a decline in volumes, and 30% are seeing
free capacity in the market due to Covid. Spring 2020 saw a record
high in available capacity, with transport prices correspondingly
low. As a result, only 28% are planning to increase capacity this
year - against 46% last year. One in 10 will cut their capacity.
Covid and its consequences dominate forwarder concerns, with 64%
saying it was the issue with the greatest impact on business, with
58% noting that the economy was a primary issue. Last year, driver
shortage was seen as a real concern for more than 50% of forwarders,
now it is worrying for less than 15%.
Despite severe lockdowns in countries such as Italy and Spain,
freight forwarders in the UK, Ireland and Poland see the greatest
impact of Covid on their own situation, with over 70% of carriers in
each market affected.
However, digitalisation is one positive, with 74% of forwarders
saying it will improve their business. Nearly 50% said the best
optimisation would be cutting waiting and unloading times, while the
second most important measure was time slot management.
The majority of forwarders give customers the current position
of the shipment when asked, with 42% giving customers live tracking
and 38% give customers the ability to view status messages.
Emissions, however, remain a problem. Nearly 43% are unable to
calculate them, while 72% said less than 10% of their customers ask
for emissions data.
"In the currently very challenging economic situation, it's
absolutely vital that transport companies, but also our governments,
continue to invest in digitalisation and data-driven
infrastructures," said Stephan Sieber, chief executive of
Transporeon.
"We see this in the survey results: three-quarters of all
carriers believe digitalisation will improve their business
situation; and we see it in the increased uptake in spot market
opportunities, which only become possible through enhanced digital
technology.
"In the years ahead, I'm convinced digital technology will
not only make the industry more efficient, but also play a central
role in managing its environmental impact. And clearly we have a lot
of work to do there."
Orient Overseas (International) Limited (OOIL), la società
controllata dal gruppo armatoriale cinese COSCO Shipping Holdings
che opera servizi di trasporto marittimo containerizzato con ...
- Via Raffaele Paolucci 17r/19r - 16129 Genova - ITALIA
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Direttore responsabile Bruno Bellio Vietata la riproduzione, anche parziale, senza l'esplicito consenso dell'editore