Startups apply artificial intelligence to supply chain disruptions
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[May 03, 2022]
By Nick Carey
LONDON (Reuters) - Over the last two years
a series of unexpected events has scrambled global supply chains.
Coronavirus, war in Ukraine, Brexit and a container ship wedged in the
Suez Canal have combined to delay deliveries of everything from bicycles
to pet food.
In response, a growing group of startups and established logistics firms
has created a multi-billion dollar industry applying the latest
technology to help businesses minimize the disruption.
Interos Inc, Fero Labs, KlearNow Corp and others are using artificial
intelligence and other cutting-edge tools so manufacturers and their
customers can react more swiftly to supplier snarl-ups, monitor raw
material availability and get through the bureaucratic thicket of
cross-border trade.
The market for new technology services focused on supply chains could be
worth more than $20 billion a year in the next five years, analysts told
Reuters. By 2025, more than 80% of new supply chain applications will
use artificial intelligence and data science in some way, according to
tech research firm Gartner.
"The world's gotten too complex to try to manage some of these things on
spreadsheets," said Dwight Klappich, a Gartner analyst.
Interos, valued at more than $1 billion in its latest funding round, is
one of the most successful in the nascent market. The Arlington,
Virginia-based company says it has mapped out 400 million businesses
globally and uses machine learning to monitor them on behalf of
corporate customers, alerting them immediately when fire, flood, hacking
or any other event causes a potential disruption.
Before Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine in February, the company had
assessed the impact of an invasion. Interos said it identified about 500
U.S. firms with direct supplier relations with companies in Ukraine.
Further down the chain Interos found 20,000 U.S. firms had links to
second-tier suppliers in Ukraine and 100,000 U.S. firms had links to
third-tier suppliers.
Chief Executive Jennifer Bisceglie said after the war started 700
companies approached Interos for help in assessing their exposure to
suppliers in Ukraine and Russia. She said the company is developing a
new product to game out other hypothetical supply chain disruption
scenarios, such as China invading Taiwan, for customers to understand
their exposure to risk and where to find alternative suppliers.
Supply chain shocks are inevitable, Bisceglie told Reuters. "But I think
we're going to get better at minimizing these disruptions."
U.S. airline Delta Air Lines Inc, which spends more than $7 billion a
year on catering, uniforms and other goods on top of its plane and fuel
budget, is one company using Interos to keep track of its 600 primary
suppliers and 8,000 total suppliers.
"We're not expecting to avoid the next crisis," said Heather Ostis,
Delta’s supply chain chief. "But we're expecting to be a lot more
efficient and effective than our competitors in how we assess risk when
that happens."
MEAT, STEEL, SHAMPOO
Santa Clara, California-based KlearNow sells a platform that automates
cumbersome paper-dominated customs clearance processes.
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Shipping containers pass through the Suez Canal in Suez, Egypt
February 15, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
That has been a lifesaver for EED Foods, based in
Doncaster, England, which imports Czech and Slovak sweets and smoked
meats for expat customers in Britain.
"Before Brexit we were very scared we would have to
shut down," said Elena Ostrerova, EED's purchasing manager. "But
instead we are busy as never before."
Ostrerova says her company is still growing at annual rate of 40%
after Brexit took effect in early 2020, partly because some
competitors gave up rather than tackle the onerous new paperwork for
importing from the European Union.
She said KlearNow’s customs clearance platform keeps track of its
hundreds of shipments from Central Europe, tallying totals on
thousands of items, correcting mistakes on everything from country
of origin to gross net weight, and providing an entry number - under
which all the information about a shipment is contained - for the
company hauling it to Britain.
"We have minimum human involvement," Ostrerova said, which saves the
company time and the cost of manual data input.
Berk Birand, CEO of New York-based Fero Labs, said the coronavirus
pandemic highlighted the need for manufacturers to adapt to changing
suppliers so that they can continue to make identical products, no
matter the origin of the raw materials.
The startup's platform uses machine learning to monitor and adapt to
how raw materials from different suppliers affect product quality,
from varying impurities in steel to the level of viscosity in a
surfactant, a key ingredient in shampoo. The system then
communicates with plant engineers to tweak manufacturing processes
so that product consistency is maintained.
Dave DeWalt, founder of venture capital firm NightDragon, which led
Interos' $100 million Series C funding round last year, says
regulators are going to take much greater interest in supply chain
risk.
"If you have a supply chain issue that could cost you major
shareholder value, you'll have a major responsibility too," DeWalt
said. "I believe that's coming in the near future."
Major logistics firms are also deploying machine learning to boost
their competitiveness. U.S. truck fleet operator Ryder System Inc
uses the real-time data from its fleet, and those of its customers
and partners, to create algorithms for predicting traffic patterns,
truck availability and pricing.
Silicon Valley venture capital firm Autotech Ventures has invested
in both KlearNow and newtrul, which aggregates data from transport
management systems in America's highly fragmented trucking sector to
predict pricing changes.
"Mapping your supply chain and interconnectivity at the individual
part level is the Holy Grail," said Autotech partner Burak Cendek.
(Reporting By Nick Carey; Editing by Bill Rigby)
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