Today's Top Supply Chain and Logistics News From WSJ
15 December 2015 - 11:00PM
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Shipping industry praise for the Paris climate-change agreement
doesn't disguise a divide in global transport over carbon-emissions
reduction efforts. Shipping was left out of the landmark agreement
that was reached over the weekend, the WSJ reports, and business
groups now are looking for action within the industry. Several say
the Paris agreement should provide an impetus for the International
Maritime Organization to set a common global standard to curb
emissions. The industry's regulatory body isn't committing to
setting overall targets, though, and differences among countries
and carriers present a high hurdle for action. Some carriers say
they want to see a global standard to prevent a patchwork of
regional rules from cropping up, a case they'll make next April,
when the IMO's Marine Environment Protection Committee holds its
first meeting following the Paris announcement.
The deadline for holiday shipping deliveries is almost here.
Shipments are taking significantly longer this year to be
delivered, the WSJ's Laura Stevens reports, as online sales push
more packages into the distribution stream. It's a sign of the
changing nature of shopping, and of the growing competition for
customers that is straining delivery channels. It took an average
of nearly seven days, or 20% longer than last year, for orders
placed on Cyber Monday to arrive, according to retail consultancy
Kurt Salmon. A big driver for shoppers may be the price: Ninety
percent of retailers offered free shipping, up from 78% from last
year. The parcel carriers aren't carrying the goods for free, of
course, so the holidays may bring them a big financial boost even
as they try to dig out from the flood of orders.
Norfolk Southern Co. and Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. are
getting closer to a potential proxy fight. The U.S. freight
railroad rejected CP's latest $30 billion takeover bid, the WSJ's
Laura Stevens reports, in a letter that was even more strongly
worded than Norfolk Southern's initial rebuff. Norfolk Southern
says its surveyed out regulatory experts, including former members
of the U.S. Surface Transportation Board, on the possible
combination. There's nothing to suggest the CP-NS combination would
pass regulatory muster, Norfolk Southern says, and CP doesn't even
address the issue. With activist investor William Ackman backing
CP, though, it's unlikely the railroad is concerned about the de
facto truce that's held back major freight rail consolidation for
nearly two decades.
SUPPLY CHAIN STRATEGIES
Auto-parts makers are preparing to crank up mergers and
acquisitions to advance their technology offerings. The suppliers
are looking at targets outside the traditional boundaries of the
automotive supply chain, the WSJ's Jeff Bennett reports, suggesting
a move to software companies. The results of a new Ernst &
Young survey suggests a broad change in components manufacturing,
with potentially fewer companies competing over parts with greater
complexity and higher value. Global M&A in the auto-parts
industry is already picking up after slipping earlier in the year.
French parts maker Plastic Omnium said Monday it is buying Faurecia
SA's automotive exteriors business for an undisclosed amount; and
units of India's Mahindra Group agreed to buy 76% of Italian auto
designer Pininfarina SpA for about $185 million.
QUOTABLE
IN OTHER NEWS
Argentina's new president will eliminate export taxes on some
agriculture products in a bid to stimulate farm production.
(WSJ)
Dow Chemical Co. and DuPont Co. face major hurdles in
integrating their far-flung supply chains. (WSJ)
Seattle's city council voted to allow drivers for ride-hailing
services like Uber Technologies Inc. to unionize, expanding the
challenges the app-driven operators face to their business models.
(WSJ)
Natural gas prices fell to a 14-year low as unusually warm
weather in the U.S. saps demand. (WSJ)
Most drone owners will have to register their devices under new
rules from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. (WSJ)
Consumer-products maker Newell Rubbermaid Inc. will acquire
Jarden Corp., merging brands including Yankee Candle and Graco baby
strollers. (WSJ)
Sales of new cars in Europe surged 13.7% in November. (WSJ)
An investigation shows Thailand's $7 billion seafood export
industry is filled with slavery, and that shrimp peeled by enslaved
workers is reaching the U.S., Europe and Asia. (Associated
Press)
Truckload spot rates surged in the first week of December as
retailers showed increased demand for inventory replenishment. (DC
Velocity)
Police say a worker at a Ford Motor Corp. Ohio plant stole
$500,000 worth of tire sensors and tried to sell them online.
(Industry Week)
The Ethical Trading Initiative says it found "massive
exploitation" of workers in Italy's tomato farming. (Supply
Management)
The arrival of mega-ships at U.S. ports will lead to more
automation at container terminals. (JOC)
Schenker AG will buy a controlling stake in British trucker
Redhead International and merge its operations with DB Schenker
Logistics. (Motor Transport)
Break bulk ship operator AAL and competitor Swire Shipping will
consolidate Asia-Australia services amid declining commodity
shipping business. (BreakBulk)
Global cotton production has fallen below projected consumption
for the first time in five seasons but high stocks are keeping
prices high. (Fibre2Fashion)
The U.S. Senate may vote this week on a bill to update trade
regulations in reauthorizing Customs programs. (American
Shipper)
Cargo handling equipment maker Southworth International Group
acquired Sweden-based Margo AB. (Modern Materials Handling)
ABOUT US
Paul Page is deputy editor of WSJ Logistics Report. Follow him
at @PaulPage, and follow the entire WSJ Logistics Report team:
@brianjbaskin, @lorettachao, @RWhelanWSJ and @EEPhillips_WSJ, and
follow the WSJ Logistics Report on Twitter at @WSJLogistics.
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Write to Paul Page at paul.page@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 15, 2015 06:45 ET (11:45 GMT)
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