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Logistics Viewpoints (09/30/24 – 10/03/2024)
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2 ans agoon
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Logistics Viewpoints (09/30/2024- 10/04/2024)
As a Florida native, hurricanes are a familiar part of life, shaping the experiences of millions who call the southern coastal regions home. Among the most devastating storms in the last century, Hurricane Helene ranks in the top five deadliest. It unleashed severe flooding across unexpected areas of the Carolinas, submerging coastal homes under record-high water levels. Unfortunately, such storms are becoming increasingly common. Now, more than ever, communities and all levels of government must rally to support those affected, while rebuilding in ways that strengthen resilience and preparedness for the future.
In the same week, thousands of port workers initiated a strike, demanding better working conditions, and fair pay, and pushing back against automation technologies that threaten their livelihoods. Hurricanes and labor strikes are formidable disruptions to supply chains, exposing critical vulnerabilities. This week serves as a stark reminder of the fragility of modern supply chains and the urgent need to address these underlying weaknesses.
Let’s hop into the supply chain news for the week:
FERC has Approved California Independent Systems Operators Interconnection Reform Plan
CAISO’s interconnection reforms aim to streamline California’s energy grid connection process, addressing a supply chain bottleneck in clean energy project development. The California Independent System Operator’s plan to reform its generator interconnection process includes a provision critics say gives utilities a discriminatory role in determining which projects move forward into review clusters. With a backlog of 185 GW in active projects and 347 GW from the latest application window, the reforms prioritize projects based on readiness and need, ensuring that the most viable projects can proceed despite limited transmission capacity. This will help alleviate delays in the supply chain for renewable energy, ensuring critical projects receive grid access faster, which in turn supports California’s renewable energy goals. However, concerns remain about potential favoritism towards utility-affiliated projects, which could impact fair competition in the energy supply chain.
47,000 Dockworkers Go on Strike
Harold J. Daggett, president of the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA), is leading a significant strike at major East and Gulf Coast ports, disrupting supply chains and halting trade. The union, representing 47,000 members, is pushing for higher wages, better benefits, and limitations on labor-saving technologies. Dockworkers claim the corporations have had multiple years of record profits and have not seen evidence of those revenue increases reflected in their pay. The U.S Maritime Alliance, the group negotiating with for the ports has offered 50% raises over the six-year life of the contract but the union has signaled that it plans on sticking with its initial 77% pay increase over six years. This is the first time since 1977 that dockworkers have gone on strike spanning over 36 ports in East Coast and Gulf Coast ports. A one-week strike could cost the U.S. economy nearly $ 3.8 billion and increase the cost of consumer goods. Daggett frames the strike as a battle against multinational corporations profiting from pandemic-related supply chain chaos, asserting the union’s essential role in the logistics of global trade.
One of New England’s Oldest Coal Plant Is Sold by Dynegy to Brayton Point
Old coal plants, like Brayton Point in Massachusetts, are sometimes repurposed rather than simply retired. Brayton Point, once New England’s largest coal plant, faced various ownership changes and economic decisions over the years. Despite billions spent on environmental upgrades by Dominion Energy, subsequent owners, including Energy Capital Partners and Dynegy, found it economically unviable to convert the plant for gas power or other energy production. In 2015, Dynegy closed the plant and eventually sold it to Commercial Development Company (CDC), which intends to demolish the site and market it for wind energy projects. The site’s prime location for offshore wind power development and its infrastructure make it ideal for wind-related industrial purposes. CDC has repurposed other coal plants similarly, reflecting a shift towards renewable energy. CDC plans to turn the retired coal plant into an industrial port and staging area for the offshore wind power industry.
Redwood Logistics Reveals Industry Shifting Logistics Health Assessment Solution
Redwood Logistics has introduced a Logistics Health Assessment aimed at helping companies identify and address logistics challenges, particularly in response to supply chain disruptions, demand volatility, and rising customer expectations. This assessment goes beyond typical industry analyses by examining transportation technology applications and partnerships, as well as benchmarking existing 3PL performance. It provides tailored insights on procurement, transportation, global trade, and warehousing, offering solutions that integrate data, analytics, and automation. Redwood offers three levels of assessment, from foundational analysis to customized transformation roadmaps, helping companies improve logistics performance and competitiveness.
Rural areas hit by Helene May Not Regain Power for Weeks
Last week, the Southeastern United States was hit by category 4 hurricane Helene causing upwards of +100 deaths and leaving a massive amount of wreckage behind. The storm knocked out power to 6 million customers and devastated communities across the southeast U.S. Many rural and remote consumers in this area are a part of electric cooperatives which are difficult to restore. Electric cooperative customers are about 1.25 million of the total outages, more than half of those have been restored. In total, 1.3 million electric users remained without power on Wednesday. This could take days, or weeks, and depends on the amount of damage the location sustained. Mike Couick the CEO of Electric Cooperatives of South Carolina said that they are sending out 30 trailer truckloads of materials every day out of our supply cooperatives. The supply chain is not suffering from shortages but the amount of materials being sent out in 3-4 days is equivalent to six months to a year. For example, the South Carolina cooperative has about 2,000 downed power poles, and areas near the Savannah River and adjacent to the Blue Ridge Mountains were affected.
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Ocean freight forwarding is an $80+ billion market bogged down by the manual processes related to booking management, documentation services, and the coordination labor that holds it all together.
When working with a freight forwarder, you’re buying three things bundled together:
Carrier relationships — access to capacity, negotiated rates, allocation commitments.
Operational data — knowing which carrier fits a given lane, what documents a particular trade corridor requires, how to handle an exception when a booking gets rejected.
Coordination labor — the booking itself, the documents per container (industry estimates range from 9 to 18 depending on the corridor), the re-keying of data across disconnected systems, the email chains chasing confirmations and clearances.
Shippers have always paid for the bundle because you couldn’t get one piece without the others, but that’s changing.
Where the bundle comes apart
Travel agents used to bundle airline relationships, destination expertise, and the labor of putting trips together into a single fee. Aggregator platforms unbundled the pieces, and the booking layer went first because that’s where the volume was. Ocean freight forwarding is in the same position. More than digitizing booking, though, AI is automating it.
The bulk of the volume and labor cost for freight forwarders is tied up in rate comparisons across dozens of carriers, document preparation and routing by trade lane and commodity classification, booking execution against pre-negotiated contracts, and exception triage on rejected bookings.
But this is all high-volume, rule-governed, multi-system coordination where speed and consistency matter more than creativity. Exactly the type of work that AI agents are well-equipped to handle.
Platforms can now ingest a rate agreement, parse surcharges and FAK provisions into a digital rate profile, compare carriers on cost, transit time, and schedule reliability, and execute a booking based on pre-defined parameters, without a human in the loop.
Automating the entire order lifecycle
Every dollar of margin exposure in ocean freight traces back to a decision made without complete information. That means that every action must be rooted in live network data across shipment flows, carrier performance, and insight from inventory and order systems. A platform with that intelligence can automate and accelerate the full workflow from detecting a supply shortfall, selecting a carrier, booking the container, managing the documents, tracking the shipment, and handling exceptions.
A shipper stitching together a rate tool from one vendor, a booking portal from another, a document system from a third, and a visibility feed from a fourth gets digitization. They get a slightly faster version of the same manual process. The full picture still lives in a person’s head, and the handoffs between systems still require human coordination.
While freight forwarders and other intermediaries are also investing in AI, they’re primarily automating their own coordination labor before someone else absorbs it. But they can’t replicate the data advantage of a platform that sits across the entire supply chain.
A forwarder automating its booking desk draws on its own transaction history. A point solution built specifically for ocean booking draws on booking data. A platform processing millions of supply chain events daily across orders, inventory, carrier performance, and live shipment status, has a different signal base entirely. Carrier selection informed by real-time schedule reliability, live network disruption, and your actual inventory positions is structurally more accurate than carrier selection informed by historical rate tables.
The shrinking intermediary layer
The moats around freight forwarders’ profit margins are eroding, and the lines between legacy endpoint solutions are blurring. High-complexity corridors and specialized commodities still need human expertise, but the bread-and-butter containerized freight that makes up the bulk of forwarder revenue is the volume where automated workflows shine.
Meanwhile, software providers will have a hard time selling dashboards and chatbots to specific teams compared to AI-native platforms offering a single operating system across all supply chain operations, and serving downstream stakeholders.
The question for forwarders is how long they can keep patching automation onto a fragmented architecture with a booking tool here, a document system there, people bridging the handoffs in between. And how much revenue sits in structured, repeatable work that a connected platform absorbs?
For shippers, the choice is whether to invest in a platform that automates the order-to-delivery and exception lifecycle, or keep paying others to hold the pieces together. The second option is a decision to fund the intermediary layer sitting between them and their own data.
The post The Freight Forwarder Moat Is Getting Shallower appeared first on Logistics Viewpoints.
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Supply Chain and Logistics News Week of May 7th 2026
Published
20 heures agoon
8 mai 2026By
The logistics and supply chain landscape is undergoing a fundamental transformation as industries move from rigid, low-cost models toward strategies defined by agility and resilience. This week’s roundup explores how major players are navigating this shift, from Amazon’s bold move to offer its massive infrastructure as a standalone service to Ford’s strategic manufacturing reset in the EV sector. We also dive into the critical human element in modern cost engineering, the logistical reimagining of energy corridors due to geopolitical risks, and the new AI-driven tools closing the gap between inventory detection and real-time execution. Together, these developments highlight a common theme: the pursuit of flexibility and data-driven intelligence in an increasingly unpredictable global market.
Top Supply Chain Stories from this Week:
Modern Cost Engineering Evolution: Rewiring the Human Element for Supply Chain Resilience
In the latest shift for cost engineering, the focus is moving beyond purely digital tools to address the critical human element required for true supply chain resilience. As industrial organizations transition from traditional backward-looking estimates to modern “should-cost” methods powered by AI and digital twins, the real challenge lies in workforce transformation. Success in this new landscape requires a significant cultural shift, moving away from isolated departmental silos toward cross-functional collaboration. By reskilling traditional estimators to act as strategic consultants—capable of interpreting material science and operational constraints—companies can evolve from simple price negotiation to collaborative manufacturing improvements that ensure mutual profitability and long-term stability.
Hormuz Risk Is Redrawing the Supply Chain Geography of Energy
Geopolitical instability in the Strait of Hormuz is forcing a fundamental shift in energy logistics, moving the industry away from lowest-cost network design toward a risk-adjusted model. With the waterway handling roughly 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas, repeated disruptions have transformed infrastructure like pipelines, storage terminals, and deep-water ports outside the Persian Gulf into high-value strategic assets. Nations and corporations are no longer viewing these as simple logistics nodes, but as essential escape routes that provide the optionality and recovery time needed to withstand chokepoint failures. This selective redesign of the global energy map signals a new era where geography and physical redundancy are the primary drivers of supply chain resilience.
Ford’s Manufacturing Reset Shows How Automakers Are Rebuilding the EV Supply Chain
Ford’s manufacturing pivot represents a fundamental shift from aggressive electric vehicle expansion toward capital discipline and supply chain flexibility. By taking a $19.5 billion write-down and restructuring battery joint ventures, the company is moving away from rigid, single-purpose production lines in favor of multi-energy platforms that can adapt to fluctuating demand for hybrids and EVs. A key component of this reset is the repurposing of battery manufacturing assets in Kentucky and Michigan for stationary energy storage and data center support. This strategy transforms these facilities into flexible energy infrastructure rather than just automotive supply nodes. Ultimately, Ford is signaling that the next phase of the market will be defined by the ability to manage uncertainty through cross-functional asset utilization and a focus on manufacturing-driven affordability.
How FourKites Connects Stockout Detection to Freight Execution in Minutes
FourKites has launched a unified solution that bridges the gap between stockout detection and freight execution, reducing resolution time from hours to less than five minutes. By integrating its Inventory Twin and Booking Connect AI, the platform eliminates the traditional “manual scavenger hunt” where planners had to jump between ERPs and carrier portals to resolve inventory gaps. The system uses decision intelligence to identify stockout risks up to six weeks in advance and provides ranked recommendations for corrective transfers based on cost, speed, and carrier performance. This closed-loop workflow allows planners to execute optimized shipping options with a single click, addressing the massive financial impact of inventory distortion and reducing the need for expensive, unplanned expedited shipping.
Amazon Launches “Supply Chain Services” Leveraging its Global Logistics Network
Amazon has officially launched Amazon Supply Chain Services (ASCS), a move that decouples its massive logistics infrastructure from its retail marketplace to serve as a standalone utility for all businesses. Similar to the trajectory of Amazon Web Services (AWS), the platform opens up Amazon’s multimodal freight, automated warehousing, and last-mile parcel delivery networks to companies regardless of whether they sell on Amazon. Major early adopters like Procter & Gamble, 3M, and Lands’ End are already leveraging the service to move everything from raw materials to finished products. By consolidating fragmented logistics contracts into a single automated interface, Amazon aims to use its scale—currently moving 13 billion items annually—to provide businesses with end-to-end visibility and 96.4% on-time delivery rates, signaling a significant new challenge to traditional 3PLs and carriers like FedEx and UPS.
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How FourKites Connects Stockout Detection to Freight Execution in Minutes
Published
2 jours agoon
7 mai 2026By
FourKites is bridging the gap between identifying a problem and solving it. With the integration of Inventory Twin and Booking Connect AI. Traditionally, supply chain planners have been stuck in a manual scavenger hunt whenever a stockout alert surfaced, jumping between ERPs to find surplus stock and carrier portals to secure freight. This fragmented process typically took hours, often forcing companies to rely on expensive, last-minute expedited shipping or facing steep On-Time In-Full (OTIF) penalties to avoid customer dissatisfaction. By unifying these disparate data streams, the new solution allows teams to detect risks two to six weeks in advance and execute corrective transfers from a single, seamless workflow.
The impact on operational efficiency is significant, reducing the resolution time from detection to execution from several hours to less than five minutes. Instead of just receiving a warning, planners are presented with recommendations powered by Decision Intelligence that include the fastest, cheapest, and most optimal shipping options based on real-time carrier performance data. This closed-loop system directly addresses the 1.73 trillion dollar global issue of inventory distortion and aims to eliminate the 15-25 hours planners previously spent on manual coordination.
By keeping a human in the loop to select the best recommendation with a single click, FourKites ensures that exceptions are resolved without ever leaving the platform. This integration helps protect freight budgets, where unplanned expedited shipping often consumes up to 48% of total spend. This launch represents a shift from reactive firefighting to proactive execution, allowing teams to move away from costly safety stock and focus on high-value responsibilities. Supply chain planner responsibilities are changing with the continued developments of AI and the de-siloing of disparate systems.
FourKites is a supply chain technology provider that operates a global real-time visibility network tracking over 3.2 million shipments daily across 200 countries and territories. By integrating data from 1.1 million carriers across all modes (road, rail, ocean, and air), the platform uses AI-powered “digital workers” to automate exception resolution and provide predictive insights. More than 1,600 global brands, including leaders in the CPG and Food & Beverage sectors, trust FourKites to transform their logistics from reactive tracking into proactive, intelligent orchestration.
Read the full ARC brief breaking down the new FourKites solution here: https://www.fourkites.com/research/arc-advisory-stockout-detection-freight-execution/
The post How FourKites Connects Stockout Detection to Freight Execution in Minutes appeared first on Logistics Viewpoints.
The Freight Forwarder Moat Is Getting Shallower
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