Supply chain problems have continued for US shippers over a year since the hard enforcement of the Electronic Logging Device (ELD) mandate, further exacerbating trucking shortage problems.
Congestions and delays as a result of a lack of truckers have caused an increase in overall shipping costs. According to online freight forwarder iContainers, this is expected to take a toll on US exporters, whose competitiveness on the global stage may be hurt.
“The trucking shortage continues to pose problems for shippers’ supply chains. It’s causing unpredictable delays and added costs, which are a huge business deterrence that can ultimately affect US exporters’ competitiveness in international markets,” says Klaus Lysdal, vice president of operations at iContainers.
With trucking companies booked full for days in advance, it has become considerably more difficult to acquire trucking coverage. Of these, last-minute shipments or shipments with unanticipated zero-hour changes have been the most affected. “Expect significantly higher costs for last minute trucking arrangements or modifications. This is either because shipments end up going into storage or demurrage for failing to secure a trucker or simply because a higher rate is needed to get a trucker to accept the last-minute move,” says Lysdal.
According to the Miami-based forwarder, the trucking shortage situation appears to have somewhat improved since its climax last year. That is due, in large part, to industry players acclimatizing to the situation. “Most shippers have also come to terms with the situation. They have realized that more planning is required in advance and have learned to adjust their day-to-day planning and find ways to make it work.”
Container-news.com reports how much has been made of autonomous trucks, an idea welcomed by iContainers. As the industry pushes down this digital path in an attempt to inject more efficiency to resolve the shortage, it will still, nonetheless, be some time before this becomes the new norm.