Although some softening economic factors have eased the capacity crunch somewhat, it's seen as a short-term situation given impending regulations that will tighten capacity further, and some interesting articles relating to trucking capacity have landed in my in-box recently.

In the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals' Annual “State of Logistics Report" released this week, author Roz Wilson warned shippers that “most of the problems that the freight logistics industry will face in the next three years will boil down to capacity issues."

“Capacity issues are on the horizon and I urge everyone to begin making contingency plans for the day when you cannot get a truck,” Wilson said.

Amazon.com, recognizing this problem, is experimenting with non-traditional delivery methods for its products, according to an article in Forbes.

Paul Martyn, a Forbes contributor, writes in a column about Amazon’s announcement to beta test same-day delivery using services like Flywheel and Uber. Amazon's new mobile app will pay in some cases ordinary people to deliver its packages.

Martyn comments:

"Amazon is not just grappling with a simple cost issue. It’s hedging against a growing capacity issue that free shipping – at its scale – will exacerbate. And if I’m Amazon and foreshadowing explosive shipping growth, I don’t want my carriers licking their chops. Rather, at the very least, I want them stabbing each other with the sharp ends of their negotiating pencils. Or even better, I want them figuring this out for me....

"There is a real and growing capacity issue that threatens to remove some of the shine from online commerce. Amazon is not going to allow itself to become its own worse enemy, meaning, it will not contribute to a situation that could re-invigorate brick and mortar-based cash and carry. Its experiments with new modes of shipping – to increase capacity – is a high stakes necessity."

The Journal of Commerce reported that a "data explosion" might help alleviate some capacity issues.

Reporting from the SMC3 Connections conference in San Diego, JOC reporter Bill Mongeluzzo wrote about PeopleNet's review of data from onboard electronic ddriver logs which found that many drivers don't even come close to the 11-hour driving limit each day -- averaging only 6.09 hours.

“We don’t really have a driver shortage problem, we have a capacity utilization problem,” said Mark Kessler, general manager for trucking at PeopleNet. He placed much of the blame on shipper and consignee delivery windows.

The kind of data coming out of onboard computers that was not available just a few years ago, he said, can help drive needed collaboration between shippers, trucking companies and logistics professionals to address these bottlenecks and improve fleet efficiency and capacity utilization.

About the author
Deborah Lockridge

Deborah Lockridge

Editor and Associate Publisher

Reporting on trucking since 1990, Deborah is known for her award-winning magazine editorials and in-depth features on diverse issues, from the driver shortage to maintenance to rapidly changing technology.

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