Motor Transport 9 May 2022

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Sharp ■ Informed ■ Challenging

NEWS INSIDE Takeover approved

Gefco to join Ceva Logistics

p3

Back in the black

Currie set for return to profit p4

Seeking net zero

Nestlé moves to bio-LNG

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OPERATORS INSIDE 4PL Links...................................................... p4 AG & Sons Transport...................................... p4 Ceva Logistics............................................... p3 Currie Solutions ............................................ p4 Dedicated Transport Solutions ....................... p4 Fagan & Whalley..........................................p22 Fortec........................................................... p4 Gefco............................................................ p3 iForce ........................................................... p3 Nestlé........................................................... p6 Pall-Ex.......................................................... p4 Pro-Driver Logistics....................................... p3 XPO Logistics................................................ p6 Yodel............................................................. p3

9.5.22

GREEN TEAM: DPD has agreed a deal with Ford for 1,000 E-Transit vans, which will take its electric vehicle (EV) fleet to over 2,500 in total. The parcel giant has purchased the 3.5-tonne, 135kWh, long-wheelbase version with 12.4cu m of loadspace. The vans will operate from depots across the UK network and DPD will take delivery of the first batch later this month. “Getting our hands on the electric Ford Transit feels like a really big moment,” said DPD UK head of sustainability Olly Craughan. “We’ve said all along that we need the main commercial van manufacturers to step up with affordable models and large-scale

production of right-hand-drive vans to really get the EV revolution going in the UK. And Ford has done just that. The E-Transit is well priced, has a good range and comes with all the support you would expect.”

Nearly a third of hauliers are at risk of imminent collapse, warns new report from Price Bailey

‘Unite to survive,’ haulage boss urges UK’s struggling operators By Tim Wallace

Mike Parr, MD of perishable goods specialist PML (pictured), has claimed new data suggesting nearly a third of the UK’s hauliers are at risk of imminent collapse is the result of the sector’s “dog eat dog” mentality, which has left smaller operators struggling while big-name competitors enjoy huge profits. Parr told MT that the challenges facing the industry could be blamed on “a failure to demonstrate a united front”, and that transport and logistics was “the hardest sector to be in because you’re getting whacked from every angle”. “But the data is a bit exaggerated,” he added. “There are some very rich haulage guys out there. A lot of them have got long-term contracts and put clauses in them. They charge for everything. But I

can see the one-man band struggling because he’s just going to get beaten down on price.” Parr’s comments come after accountants Price Bailey checked the credit risk scores of all 96,102 businesses in the UK haulage sector and found nearly a third – 28,557 – had a Delphi Risk score

in the Maximum Risk category. Hauliers struggling with record diesel prices and rapidly rising driver wages are finding it difficult to access funding without personal guarantees from directors, the report said, making them highly likely to be subject to winding-up petitions or intention-to-dissolve notices in the next 12 months. The number of road haulage businesses deemed Maximum Risk has more than doubled over the last 12-month period, it added, rising from 14,020 at the end of March 2021. The report also warned that the rising cost of road freight due to the dislocation of supply chains caused by Brexit and Covid-19 had led many bulk cargo owners to negotiate lengthy contracts with hauliers. This has locked in the price-per-mile significantly below the current rate on the spot market,

which has spiked due to the war in Ukraine. “There will always be the haulier who is prepared to work at a loss and this will of course have repercussions for others operating in the sector,” Parr commented. “If all hauliers stuck together and agreed to undertake the work with a small margin, then they would not be in this situation. Unfortunately they’re chasing the dollar and all out to get each other.” He insisted more industry collaboration would be a “sensible idea” and that PML worked successfully with a number of hauliers. “But with others it’s worked for a couple of months and then people go round the back door,” he admitted. “They try to take what you’re giving them directly.” ■ For more reaction, see our Vox Pop on page 6.

Road Transport Expo p8 Focus: regulation p10 Viewpoint: logistics pressures p12 EV maintenance p16 Profile: Fagan & Whalley p22


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