Indian trucking sector faces financial crisis due to Covid-19
19 Jul 2021
2 Min Read
CW Team
Soaring fuel costs have hit the Indian trucking sector and the industry is facing a financial crisis.
With the rise in diesel costs, over 50,000 single-truck owners are likely to go off with their businesses.
Additionally, the vehicle supply is higher than the requirement on the road that makes the matters even more worse. It would surely prompt fleet owners to reduce the fleet size considerably leaving the small-time single-truck owner in a lurch.
Single-truck owners are usually more vulnerable to hikes as they depend on big trucking companies for businesses. They work as suppliers to fleet owners who outsource their business to these small players for better network and deeper penetration in the area.
Some small fleet operators are also taking advantage of the hikes. Small transporters that follow the spot costs have been raising prices in tandem with the changes in fuel rates. The quantum of increase taken by these operators is higher than the actual surge in the fuel prices. If fuel prices have gone up by 4% in a month, the rates of small transporters have gone up 6%. They have been taking advantage of the fuel price hike and surge in demand.
With diesel and petrol costs on a continuous rise coupled with a constant increase in fuel costs to their record highs, domestic freight prices have nowhere to go but northward.
The temperature-controlled truck transportation industry looks ready to pass on the whole fuel cost hike to its customers. In temperature-controlled industry, the demand is predominantly more and exceeds the supply, hence, such an increase does not have a bearing on the business as much.
High operational prices and fuel prices are adding to the woes of transport and logistics firms eating up margins, in opposition to the government’s aims of reducing logistic costs from 13-15% to 8%. If the fuel costs continue to remain high, a similar rise in product delivery costs will become necessary, ultimately bringing about a domino effect, leading to higher inflation.
There are already talks of transporters seeking an increase in freight costs by 10-15%, and small contractors and supply chain firms are already re-evaluating long term agreements.
Soaring fuel costs have hit the Indian trucking sector and the industry is facing a financial crisis.
With the rise in diesel costs, over 50,000 single-truck owners are likely to go off with their businesses.
Additionally, the vehicle supply is higher than the requirement on the road that makes the matters even more worse. It would surely prompt fleet owners to reduce the fleet size considerably leaving the small-time single-truck owner in a lurch.
Single-truck owners are usually more vulnerable to hikes as they depend on big trucking companies for businesses. They work as suppliers to fleet owners who outsource their business to these small players for better network and deeper penetration in the area.
Some small fleet operators are also taking advantage of the hikes. Small transporters that follow the spot costs have been raising prices in tandem with the changes in fuel rates. The quantum of increase taken by these operators is higher than the actual surge in the fuel prices. If fuel prices have gone up by 4% in a month, the rates of small transporters have gone up 6%. They have been taking advantage of the fuel price hike and surge in demand.
With diesel and petrol costs on a continuous rise coupled with a constant increase in fuel costs to their record highs, domestic freight prices have nowhere to go but northward.
The temperature-controlled truck transportation industry looks ready to pass on the whole fuel cost hike to its customers. In temperature-controlled industry, the demand is predominantly more and exceeds the supply, hence, such an increase does not have a bearing on the business as much.
High operational prices and fuel prices are adding to the woes of transport and logistics firms eating up margins, in opposition to the government’s aims of reducing logistic costs from 13-15% to 8%. If the fuel costs continue to remain high, a similar rise in product delivery costs will become necessary, ultimately bringing about a domino effect, leading to higher inflation.
There are already talks of transporters seeking an increase in freight costs by 10-15%, and small contractors and supply chain firms are already re-evaluating long term agreements.
Image Source
Next Story
Dassault To Build Falcon Jets In India With Reliance
Reliance Infrastructure Ltd’s subsidiary, Reliance Aerostructure, has signed an agreement with France’s Dassault Aviation to manufacture Falcon 2000 business jets in India, with the first batch expected to roll out from its Nagpur facility by 2028. This marks the first time a Falcon aircraft will be entirely built outside France.The announcement sent Reliance Infrastructure shares surging, hitting the 5 per cent upper circuit on the BSE. Anil Ambani, Chairman of Reliance Group, hailed the agreement as a “symbol of India’s technological and manufacturing strength�, adding that it aims..
Next Story
INDEA Lays Foundation for India’s First Auto Design School
The Indian School for Design of Automobiles (INDEA), the country’s first institute focused solely on automobile design and management, held its foundation stone ceremony at XLRI Delhi-NCR. The event was graced by Union Minister for Road Transport and Highways, Nitin Gadkari, who virtually unveiled the stone as Chief Guest.INDEA aims to become a premier talent hub, driving innovation in the Indian automotive sector. The school will focus on advanced design, mobility solutions, and sustainable practices, playing a vital role in shaping India’s transition from a cost-driven to a quality-led a..
Next Story
Karnataka Launches Global Innovation Hub at Airport City
The Government of Karnataka, in collaboration with Bengaluru Airport City Limited (BACL) and ANSR, has launched a global innovation hub named District I at Bengaluru Airport City's business park. The initiative aims to elevate India’s innovation ecosystem to a global scale by fostering collaboration among startups, academia, enterprises, and government bodies.District I will serve as a platform for deep-tech entrepreneurship, enterprise innovation, and commercialisation of academic research. It brings together Global Capability Centres (GCCs), IT firms, corporate labs, startups, venture capi..