Trailer

Metro continues French expansion

Expanding Metro’s road freight coverage and service offerings in France adds further capability to the company’s strong network and enhances closeness with customers in the region.

For retailers, manufacturers, wholesalers, distributers and all types of shipper, our French import and export services support your deadlines consistently, to make your supply chains more efficient and support your cross-Channel relationships. 

Reacting positively to customer demand, Metro is expanding coverage in France to serve 80 locations across the country, with daily groupage services to/from Paris, Lyon and surrounding areas, providing the ideal balance of lead-time, capacity, frequency and cost.

In addition to daily groupage services, our road freight team offer express, part load and full load services, with equipment for every type of cargo, including refrigerated, hanging garments, outsize and hazardous goods.

Cargo is received continuously at our freight centres for daily groupage departures to and from destinations across France and for urgent shipments we provide an all-in price, transit time and booking for Express van shipments, including guaranteed next day delivery. 

To ensure that your cargo has a smooth and hassle-free Channel-crossing our driver’s customs compliance documentation is barcoded for swift and seamless ‘Smart Border’ transition. Along with dedicated ETSF (External Transit Shed Facility) in the UK and France for document discharge and customs control of inventory consignments.

And because your French customer may not want to arrange import clearances we have solutions which mean you can complete transactions with them as simply and seamlessly as if it were a domestic transaction.

The Delivered Duty Paid or ‘DDP’ Incoterm means the exporter takes responsibility for the transport of the goods and customs formalities in France, and by clearing the goods into free circulation in France and the EU you have taken the burden away from your customer.

Leverage our extensive knowledge, local expertise and unrivalled customer service to enjoy efficient, tailored solutions that meet your supply chain needs, with end-to-end supply chain visibility and milestone tracking.

Metro’s road transport solutions incorporate dedicated vehicles moving on set routes for security, with defined delivery deadlines and use GPS tracked trucks to provide full transparency on transit schedules throughout the UK and France.

Our road freight teams are located close by major manufacturing and transport hubs in Birmingham, Desford and Wythenshawe. To explore the potential of French services EMAIL Richard Gibbs to begin a conversation.

P and O

P&O inadvertently slash European Channel capacity

Freight services between the UK and Europe continue to face suspension after P&O Ferries’ Dubai-based owner, DP World laid off 800 workers last week, amid a controversial restructuring exercise. There are consequences in overland supply chains that had not been considered by most.

After announcing the immediate redundancy of 800 workers exactly a week ago, P&O said that its cross-Channel operations would be suspended “for a few days”. Today, services remain suspended between Dover and Calais, Cairnryan and Larne and Hull and Rotterdam, leaving many cross-Channel shippers few, if any, options, other than to wait for the ferry company to resume operations.

P&O linked the mass firings to the financial losses it has sustained in recent years (£100 million in 2021) and the assumption, which seems borne out by press reports, is that the agency-sourced replacement workforce will come more cheaply.

P&O Ferries carry 30% of cross-Channel trade, so any dispute that stops them operating removes a massive amount of critical capacity and will quickly lead to significant disruption.

The firing of staff with no notice has sent shockwaves through supply chains, the public and government and is showing no immediate signs of receding, which means service suspensions could be prolonged.

The company operates a fleet of 21 vessels across 11 ports and accounts for 30% of the  freight crossing the English Channel. It carries half the road trailers that pass through Dover every year and while vehicle volumes have declined 24% over the past five years, a total of 2.1 million trucks still used Dover in 2021.

The suspension of P&O’s services is yet another level of supply chain disruption for European transport operations that are already dealing with changing Brexit regulations, new UK border processes, port congestion and the continuing shortage of truck drivers.

P&O’s actions have removed a significant amount of capacity from the market and finding alternative sailings or Channel tunnel services - from carriers that don’t have the capacity to soak up all P&O’svolumes - will be very time consuming and challenging for teams that are already under extreme pressure.

Operations appear to be coping currently, but if P&O’s service suspensions persist, it is inevitable that the diversion of massive volumes to other carriers, primarily DFDS and Eurotunnel, will lead to congestion at the ports and delays in crossings for all users.

Metro has significant resource and capability focused on our customerss European supply chains, to ensure that they continue to operate effectively, despite the challenges of P&O’s service suspensions.

Our bespoke technology gives our customers supply chain visibility, of orders in transit, and our dedicated European team work closely with Eurotunnel and RoRo carriers in the primary short-sea ports including Calais, Rotterdam and Zeebrugge.

Since Brexit we have seen a reluctance of drivers to come to the UK and have consequently increased the number of vehicles carried on unaccompanied RoRo vessels, instead of road freight, favouring quieter regional ports with lots of spare capacity, including Bristol, Southampton and Tilbury to/from Zeebrugge, Antwerp and LeHavre.

To assess your situation and ensure your European traffic keeps moving, please contact us today and we will advise alternative routes to market throughout Europe. We have a huge overland operation, within our group of logistics businesses, that are delivering throughout the continent and will continue to be agile, regardless of events.

If you ship to/from Europe and need reliability and consistently cost-effective solutions, please contact Chris Carlile or Lewis White for a full review.

French pension and fuel strikes

French pension and fuel strikes

French workers are poised to start road blockades at ports from 9pm on Sunday, disrupting cross Channel traffic, should last-ditch talks fail to produce a settlement, that will prevent the ‘unlimited’ strikes.

The protest is over plans to reform the French pension system, which affects everyone in France and has prompting wide-ranging actions across sectors, with some unions aiming for a one-day action, while others say they will be taking 'unlimited' action throughout December.

The four main rail unions have all signed up, meaning the majority of the rail network across France will be affected, with ’renewable' strikes which could go on beyond December 5th.

One union representing ground crew - FO Air France - has joined unlimited strike action, while the other main union - CGT Air France - has so far not issued a strike notice, but CGT members in other industries have joined, so it is expected that their ground crew will follow suit.

Several airports are expected to experience delayed or cancelled flights.

FO Transports et Logistique, which represents some truck drivers - has joined the strike.

They don't represent all hauliers, but when French hauliers strike they favour blockades or rolling roadblocks, so there may well be some disruption on the roads.

Paris’ main highways may be blocked from today, with the first action beginning with a farmers’ blockade where they plan to send thousands of tractors into Paris today.

The French transport associations OTRE and FNTR announced that there will be blockades at the border and trucks driving slow on the highway in the north of the country and on the border with Belgium to protest against rising fuel prices.

Currently, French haulage firms benefit from a discount of €0.18 per litre of fuel and the French government is proposing to trim this to €0.16 per litre from 1 January 2020, to generate €140 million in additional tax revenues the government will use to finance improvements in road infrastructure. Trade bodies estimate it will add between €500 to €800 to the fuel bill of each truck on an annual basis.