Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Relief groups focus on Texas and Louisiana in Hurricane Delta’s wake

Storm was latest blow to hard-hit Gulf Coast region in “unprecedented” 2020 season, ALAN says.

wejo traffic flow screen shot

Relief supplies began flowing into Texas and Louisiana on Monday as the battered region began recovering from Hurricane Delta’s Friday delivery of destructive winds and dangerous floodwaters, the third hurricane to wallop the Gulf Coast in just six weeks.

The latest storm forced offshore energy production facilities to evacuate workers and halt operations, causing the greatest impact on U.S. Gulf of Mexico energy production in 15 years, as most of the region’s oil and nearly two-thirds of its natural gas output came to a halt, according to published reports.


The storm also shuttered many ports, highways, and intermodal hubs throughout the region, disrupting freight movements shortly after hurricanes Sally and Laura had caused similar problems. The relentless repetition of storms has also compounded the challenge for a U.S. economy that has been brought to its knees by the coronavirus pandemic and an associated recession, as well as other natural disasters like raging wildfires that continue to char California.

One group that is mobilizing assets to aid in the recovery is the American Logistics Aid Network (ALAN), a charitable disaster relief organization which solicits and directs donations of logistics capabilities. “Our hearts go out to all of the people on the Gulf Coast who’ve been affected,” ALAN Executive Director Kathy Fulton said in a release. “In a year with an unprecedented number of named storms, this is an incredible blow to a region that has already been very hard hit.”

ALAN has been tracking Hurricane Delta’s supply chain impacts throughout the week and expects to begin receiving its first logistics relief requests later this week, she said. “This is when the hardest work for ALAN begins – because as relief organizations get in and assess the damage, they’ll be asking us for a great deal of help,” said Fulton. “In light of that, we encourage people to access our Disaster Micro-site’s active needs section often in the weeks and months ahead – and not just for Hurricane Delta. 

One of the newest tools available to aid workers during the 2020 hurricane season is a technology platform that taps into the telematics of “connected vehicles” to provide affected states with real-time reports on traffic jams as businesses and residents evacuate—and then flood back home again—in reaction to storms. A coalition of groups this year provided the Departments of Transportation of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia with that traffic monitoring system, allowing traffic managers to avoid congestion on major escape routes by implementing lane direction reversals to increase capacity.

"In today's transportation planning world, the problem has been turning the vast amounts of available connected vehicle and mobility data into useful information that helps planners and agencies make informed decisions," Eimar Boesjes, the CEO of database technology company Moonshadow, said in a release. Moonshadow collaborated on that solution with vehicle data access provider Wejo, the University of Maryland’s Center for Advanced Transportation Technology (CATT) Lab, and public agency collaboration consortium the Eastern Transportation Coalition.

That type of data could also be helpful in helping to mitigate some of the ripple effects caused on freight markets by blockages to typical truck patterns. According to Portland, Oregon-based DAT Freight & Analytics, hurricanes usually affect freight movements in three stages.

Before the storm, shippers rush to move freight in and out of the area where the storm is expected to make landfall, and truckload rates rise sharply, DAT said. During the storm, nothing moves in or out of the affected area, although the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) may move relief supplies to locations just outside the danger zone. And after the storm passes, emergency supplies surge in to the area, causing a spike in inbound rates.

Shippers, carriers, warehouses, and relief workers will be moving through that final stage this week, now that extreme weather conditions are finally allowing safe movement. “We know most people have hurricane and disaster fatigue, because this has been a year like no other,” ALAN’s Fulton said. “However we hope they have it in them to help the Gulf Coast at least one more time, because the transportation services, warehousing space, forklifts, boxes, and other support we provide can make a hugely positive difference to so many. ALAN certainly isn’t relaxing our efforts, and we hope they won’t either.”

Recent

More Stories

photos of grocery supply chain workers

ReposiTrak and Upshop link platforms to enable food traceability

ReposiTrak, a global food traceability network operator, will partner with Upshop, a provider of store operations technology for food retailers, to create an end-to-end grocery traceability solution that reaches from the supply chain to the retail store, the firms said today.

The partnership creates a data connection between suppliers and the retail store. It works by integrating Salt Lake City-based ReposiTrak’s network of thousands of suppliers and their traceability shipment data with Austin, Texas-based Upshop’s network of more than 450 retailers and their retail stores.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

minority woman with charts of business progress

Study: Inclusive procurement can fuel economic growth

Inclusive procurement practices can fuel economic growth and create jobs worldwide through increased partnerships with small and diverse suppliers, according to a study from the Illinois firm Supplier.io.

The firm’s “2024 Supplier Diversity Economic Impact Report” found that $168 billion spent directly with those suppliers generated a total economic impact of $303 billion. That analysis can help supplier diversity managers and chief procurement officers implement programs that grow diversity spend, improve supply chain competitiveness, and increase brand value, the firm said.

Keep ReadingShow less
pie chart of business challenges in 2025

DHL: small businesses wary of uncertain times in 2025

As U.S. small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face an uncertain business landscape in 2025, a substantial majority (67%) expect positive growth in the new year compared to 2024, according to a survey from DHL.

However, the survey also showed that businesses could face a rocky road to reach that goal, as they navigate a complex environment of regulatory/policy shifts and global market volatility. Both those issues were cited as top challenges by 36% of respondents, followed by staffing/talent retention (11%) and digital threats and cyber attacks (2%).

Keep ReadingShow less
cargo ships at port

Strike threat lingers at ports as January 15 deadline nears

Retailers and manufacturers across the country are keeping a watchful eye on negotiations starting tomorrow to draft a new contract for dockworkers at East coast and Gulf coast ports, as the clock ticks down to a potential strike beginning at midnight on January 15.

Representatives from the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) and the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) last spoke in October, when they agreed to end a three-day strike by striking a tentative deal on a wage hike for workers, and delayed debate over the thornier issue of port operators’ desire to add increased automation to port operations.

Keep ReadingShow less
women shopping and checking out at store

Study: Over 15% of all retail returns in 2024 were fraudulent

As retailers enter 2025, they continue struggling to slow the flood of returns fraud, which represented 15.14%--or nearly one-sixth—of all product returns in 2024, according to a report from Appriss Retail and Deloitte.

That percentage is even greater than the 13.21% of total retail sales that were returned. Measured in dollars, returns (including both legitimate and fraudulent) last year reached $685 billion out of the $5.19 trillion in total retail sales.

Keep ReadingShow less