How Shipping Sector Will Adapt To Mounting E-commerce Challenges?

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  • The eCommerce surge is shaking up the shipping industry, making speed and efficiency a must.
  • The time has come to move beyond paper and towards widespread adoption of the game-changing electronic Bill of Lading (eBL).
  • MSC’s CDIO André Simha will explain more at an upcoming event during the eCommerce week organised by UN agency UNCTADeCommerce has skyrocketed since the start of the pandemic.
  • Due to lockdowns, travel restrictions and health concerns, more and more people are shopping from the comfort and safety of their own homes.

A recent news article published in the Marine Insight discusses how Shipping Is Adapting To The Challenges Of eCommerce Boom.

Global supply chain disruption

A surge in demand for shipping, port and intermodal transport services, which in turn has triggered disruptions and congestions in global supply chains.

Amid this uncertainty, one thing is for sure: the need for efficient, digitised processes and data-sharing has never been greater.

One year of MSC eBL: MSC paves the way for paperless trade

MSC is pushing the digital transformation of shipping with its electronic Bill of Lading (eBL) solution, launched one year ago in April 2021.

Offered via a secure blockchain platform, MSC’s eBL helps to avoid the cumbersome steps involved in filling out, checking and exchanging paper shipping documents: a time-consuming and inefficient process.

This innovative solution also helps to protect against human errors, fraud and document loss.

Crucially, it’s much faster than the traditional process, too: the eBL can reach its intended recipient within moments, as opposed to days or weeks.

This helps with logistics organisation, enables shorter payment cycles and even leads to cost savings.

The urgent need to collaborate and embrace the DCSA standards

To make initiatives such as the eBL a success, widespread adoption is key – and that depends on cross-industry collaboration.

The Digital Container Shipping Association (DSCA) is a neutral and non-profit association focusing on driving standardisation, digitalisation and interoperability in container shipping.

One of its key activities is creating industry-wide standards to enable frictionless sharing of digitised shipping data.

But to successfully implement these standards, there is an urgent need for all stakeholders of the global supply chain to contribute – and among them customs and government authorities, thus fostering a culture of trade facilitation.

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Source: Marine Insight