E-commerce is now driving global tectonic shifts in logistics.
The rapid expansion of e-commerce has created the most disruptive trend in the industrial & logistics industry, according to CBRE's recently released Last Mile / City Logistics Report, forever changing the way we think about industrial real estate and reorganizing the supply landscape. shop for sale in qatar
The growing population of cities, combined
with new age consumer behavior—driven by the millennial generation—has
increased the strain on supply chains to transport items and perishables into
cities within short time limits. As city logistics and the last mile become
more important, metropolitan areas around the world are shifting towards a more
dynamic level of transportation in order to satisfy this need.
Consumer expectations have shifted
dramatically in recent years, and supply chains have been compelled to adjust
as a result. According to CBRE study, UK millennials shop online for more than
a third of their non-food purchases, and half are predicted to shop online for
more than half of their non-food purchases by 2019. Because of its high-speed
Internet connections and smartphone penetration, the United Kingdom is one of
the leading countries in terms of online consumption. According to CBRE's Last
Mile / City Logistics research, as internet speed and technology advance
further afield, we will see replicated behavior from customers all over the
world.
The demand for immediate delivery services
(one-hour, one-day delivery) is growing in major cities around the world,
necessitating significant supply chain optimization.
Innovative last-mile initiatives, such as
multi-story warehouses in crowded hubs in APAC and EMEA, locker/pick-up
locations, and infill service centers in the Americas and EMEA, have emerged to
accommodate this demand.
In Europe, supply chain restructuring has
resulted in an increased need for efficiency, resulting in a smaller warehouse
network with larger but fewer facilities. Land suitable and zoned for
industrial use is becoming increasingly scarce as a result of population
increase and urbanization. In Greater London, for example, industrial land use
has decreased from 8.3 thousand hectares in 2001 to 7 thousand hectares in
2015. Vertical logistics facilities are well-known in East Asian markets, where
densely populated cities and a scarcity of suitable land make them a viable
option. The usage of vertically organized warehouses will become a fairly
inescapable component for the evolution of city logistics in densely populated
European hubs and heavily populated US cities as e-commerce increases and
continues to impact the market.
CBRE EMEA's Head of Industrial &
Logistics Research, Machiel Wolters, remarked, "With the support of
e-commerce, the consumer environment as a whole has significantly expanded, and
this will definitely continue at a quick pace around the world. This transition
is being driven by the millennial generation, and as they continue to populate
metropolitan areas, industrial operators will need to adapt to the changing
landscape in order to stay competitive. Securing crucial sites in and around
cities is critical, and this will open up prospects for light industrial property
and even retail establishments to serve as last mile facilities, in addition to
spurring vertical construction solutions."
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