U.S. trucking firms predict
tight capacity as loads head to storm zones
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[September 14, 2017]
By Eric M. Johnson
(Reuters) - Major trucking and logistics
firms like XPO Logisitcs Inc, Daseke Inc and United Parcel Service Inc
said capacity will shrink due to a rush of construction and repair
shipments to big-box retailers and households across the storm-crippled
U.S. Southeast, as analysts warned of higher shipping prices.
The demand for lumber, generators, cleaning supplies and appliances for
households and home improvement retailers such as Lowe's and Home Depot
in Florida, Georgia, Alabama and the Carolinas as a result of damages
from Hurricane Irma will fill trailers and containers not already
claimed by shipments for the holiday shopping season.
"Already capacity was tightening. This magnified it," XPO Chief
Operating Officer Troy Cooper said in an interview. "I think we will see
it continue to be tight as the recovery process comes on board. You will
see that into early 2018."
Tighter capacity means higher shipping prices for freight that is not
already under longer-term contract, a revenue boost for trucking
companies that could be partly offset by higher diesel prices and the
cost of time spent navigating damaged roads.
Prices were already rising due to freight demand as emergency relief
transitions to rebuilding in the Houston area following Hurricane
Harvey, IHS Markit researchers said on Wednesday.
"The impact is being felt nationwide," IHS said.
A dozen XPO less-than-truckload terminals in Florida have resumed
receiving shipments bound for destinations such as Savannah and
Charleston, South Carolina, Cooper said. But delivery and pickups in
those markets, particularly in the "last mile" to households, remain
limited by road closures, power outages and flooding, he said.
"We are partnering with customers on relief loads and trying to set up a
potential supply-chain opportunity with warehousing," Cooper said.
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A 10,000-gallon tanker truck goes into the fuel distribution area
post Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Harvey, at Port Everglades in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, U.S. on September 13, 2017. REUTERS/Bernie
Woodall
Daseke, the largest owner of flatbed equipment in North America, moved freight
out of likely disaster areas in advance of Irma and readied hundreds of
shipments of goods such as wheelchairs, diapers, portable toilets, lumber and
concrete, said Phil Byrd, chief executive officer of Daseke subsidiary Bulldog
Hiway Express.
Those trucks already helped BMW keep its manufacturing line humming in Greer,
South Carolina, this week, Byrd said. Drivers picked up three import containers
stuck at the Charleston port because of delays on a Norfolk Southern railroad
line and brought them directly to BMW's plant, he said.
YRC Worldwide Inc resumed limited operations in multiple Florida locations
including Miami and Jacksonville, the company said on Wednesday.
Atlanta-based UPS has resumed package delivery, ground and air freight
operations in all but three hard-hit locations - Islamorada and Key West,
Florida, and Brunswick, Georgia, said Mark Wallace, a UPS senior vice president.
UPS used generators to re-open sorting and distribution facilities and routed
shipments around flood zones. Drivers have started trying to deliver packages to
debris-strewn neighborhoods in Orlando, Miami and Charleston.
"If you think about how people are going to recover, they are going to recover
by ordering and getting things delivered to their homes," Wallace said. "It is a
sign of getting people back to normalcy."
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Additional reporting by Gary
McWilliams in Houston; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Leslie Adler)
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