Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - (Page 72) INDUSTRY VOICES has been on the owner operator segment, but many have exited the market. But trucking is a commodity business with easy entry and exit. When the economy rebounds, those trucks will be back in the market very quickly, perhaps being operated by someone else. Trucks will come back quickly, certainly much more quickly than an ocean carrier can build a new containership or a railroad can add more track or terminals. Q: Are rail and intermodal benefiting from the higher cost of trucking? Bentz: Many ocean carriers have slowed from 28 to 22 knots to save fuel. But by slowing the vessels, carriers may have to add another vessel to the string. They really are limited in what they can do in the short term to save fuel and operating costs without damaging service. Maersk has taken an interesting step. It has just announced 17 new vessels. What is interesting is that they are all in the range of about 2,500 TEUs, rather than 10,000 to 15,000 TEUs, which has been the trend. The ocean carriers are realizing that megavessels work well on a few lanes, but not in all lanes. Q: How about airfreight? Has the cost of fuel pushed costs so high that patterns are changing? Bentz: The air cargo industry is having real problems. The carriers flying less efficient three-engine planes can’t afford to run these old aircraft. That capacity will go away very soon, and it will not be replaced rapidly. Airfreight rates used to be four or five times the cost of ocean rates. With fuel prices likely staying high over the long run, air will be more like eight or nine times ocean. Air will simply be cost prohibitive for all but the most valuable products. Q: Are there more far-reaching supply chain ramifications from high fuel and transportation costs? Bentz: Yes, but these take a few years to take effect, even with today’s higher costs. Eventually we will see a shortening in supply chains with less emphasis on offshoring. Companies can’t afford to make products in China if it requires at least 30 days of inventory in the pipeline and entails significantly higher transportation rates and fuel surcharges. Supply chains that extend to Asia increasingly slow a company’s agility and ability to get its products to market fast enough. We will probably not see a massive resurgence of manufacturing in the Rust Belt, but we see some product being produced in Mexico, Brazil and other places closer to the U.S. than Asia. Q: Have higher fuel costs made private fleets an extravagance that companies can no longer afford? Bentz: No. Half of all trucking today is still private if you include dedicated contract carriage. That statistic has not Bentz: Yes and no. The raw statistics show that all intermodal loadings are down this year, which is the first time in many years that this has happened. Loadings have climbed to more than 20 million per year thanks largely to Asian imports. The decline in imports through the West Coast that usually move via rail to points inland and the East Coast are the main culprit. More ocean carriers are also going all-water from Asia to the East Coast, and this freight mainly moves by truck from the ports to interior points. But even with loadings down, intermodal revenue is up. Railroads have been able to get price increases to stick. Even the domestic trailer-on-flatcar business, which for years has lost market share to domestic containers, has recently increased. Savings of 10 to 25 percent have gained the attention of domestic shippers as well as importers. On the rail carload side, overall volume and revenue are up. The gains vary from market to market. Forest products are housing driven, and that market is down about 12 percent. On the other hand, grain and coal and other commodities are up significantly. So you have a net rise in tonnage, and rates are going up— for some commodities at double-digit clip. This higher pricing is not driving business to other modes because their prices have gone up as well. But it is not all good news for the railroads. A government study says that there is a growing capacity shortfall. Private capital will not be enough to meet the need, so what do we do? No one has come up with the answer, but the rail industry will run out of capacity before it runs out of demand. Infrastructure will have to increase. changed significantly over the last 25 years because many industries simply need the specialized services of private fleets. What has changed is that the fleets are no longer an owned-asset operated by company employees. They are run by dedicated fleet operators. Most retailers still need to service five or six stores on every truck leaving their DCs. The rigors of scheduling five or six store deliveries are so critical to store operations and product availability that few retailers are willing to rely on common carriers. Of course, that evaluation is always going on, but private fleets are still the preferred option for most retailers. Q: Given the cost pressures of higher fuel and transportation costs, what are the technology trends that shippers are looking at? Bentz: The importance of supply chain information, especially visibility will be even more paramount than it is today. According to a recent survey of major manufacturers and retailers, supply chain visibility and event management is the primary technology investment planned for the coming year. There is widespread realization that better visibility technology is needed if a company has a complex supply chain, wants to manage inventory better, needs to distribute more quickly and also wants more transportation agility. You need to know where your stuff is at all times. For example, retailers today often import product from Asia through the West Coast and then ship it to DCs on the East Coast via rail. The freight gets sorted and segregated at the DC and then shipped by truck via a pool distributor back to stores as far as the West Coast. That type of network is very common, and it is a profit killer. To get around this costly and time consuming strategy, companies need technology that allows transloading individual orders directly from West Coast ports to the stores. The transcontinental tour is no longer affordable, and better technology is needed to efficiently handle the transloading and direct shipping. To access this article online, visit The Digital Edition at www.SupplyChainBrain.com. Q: How are ocean carriers dealing with the higher cost of fuel? Resource Link Accenture, www.accenture.com 72 OCTOBER 2007 www.supplychainbrain.com http://www.SupplyChainBrain.com http://www.accenture.com http://www.supplychainbrain.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 Contents Editorial GL&SCS Exclusive Fastforward Up Front The Top Story In the Driver's Seat Think Inside the Box Recipe for Success NITL Preview Opinion Industry Voices Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 (Page Cover1) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 (Page Cover2) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 (Page 3) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 10) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Contents (Page 11) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Editorial (Page 12) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Editorial (Page 13) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - GL&SCS Exclusive (Page 14) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - GL&SCS Exclusive (Page 15) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - GL&SCS Exclusive (Page 16) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - GL&SCS Exclusive (Page 17) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Fastforward (Page 18) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Fastforward (Page 19) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Fastforward (Page 20) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Fastforward (Page 21) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 22) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 23) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 24) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 25) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 26) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 27) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 28) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 29) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 30) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 31) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 32) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Up Front (Page 33) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 34) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 35) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 36) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 37) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 38) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 39) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 40) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 41) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 42) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - The Top Story (Page 43) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - In the Driver's Seat (Page 44) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - In the Driver's Seat (Page 45) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - In the Driver's Seat (Page 46) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - In the Driver's Seat (Page 47) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - In the Driver's Seat (Page 48) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - In the Driver's Seat (Page 49) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 50) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 51) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 52) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 53) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 54) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 55) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 56) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Think Inside the Box (Page 57) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Recipe for Success (Page 58) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Recipe for Success (Page 59) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Recipe for Success (Page 60) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Recipe for Success (Page 61) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - NITL Preview (Page 62) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - NITL Preview (Page 63) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - NITL Preview (Page 64) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - NITL Preview (Page 65) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Opinion (Page 66) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Opinion (Page 67) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Opinion (Page 68) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Opinion (Page 69) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page 70) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page 71) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page 72) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page 73) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page 74) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page 75) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page Cover3) Global Logistics and Supply Chain Strategies - October 2008 - Industry Voices (Page Cover4)
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