All The Supply Chain News You Need To Know 4/22 - 4/26
EU Prep Retaliatory Tariff, First Drone Delivery Certification, and Returning Amazon Orders at Kohls
Union Pacific temporarily halts construction of Brazos Yard – Construction on the $550 million project in Robertson County, Texas was paused this week as Union Pacific funnels more funding toward other projects. Funds originally allotted to Brazos Yard – UP’s largest investment in a single facility since its founding – will be redirected toward extensions in its Sunset route and a block-swap yard in New Mexico. Before siphoning funds, Brazos Yard was expected to open in 2020.
EU Considers €20B in Tariffs Against US – This is just the latest punch in the economic scuffle between the two over competition between Airbus and Boeing. Like America’s most recent threat to tariff European signature products like wine and cheese, the EU’s new tariff will take aim at American signatures like tractors and ketchup.
ZIM Signs on as Latest Member of TradeLens – The American-Israeli cargo shipper, ZIM, has joined Maersk and IBM’s joint blockchain solution. With ZIM on board, TradeLens now sees 21% of total market share. As a data driven, transparency-centric venture, the name of the game is collecting more clean information, and the addition of the world’s 11th largest carrier is a big step in the right direction.
Amazon Orders Can Now Be Returned to Kohl’s – After running a successful pilot, Amazon announced that select orders can be returned to any of Kohl’s 1,150 locations, free of charge. Returns have been a challenge for the growing list of online retailers, and Amazon may have innovated by returning (almost a pun) to the pre-Amazon status quo.
FAA Approves Alphabet-Owned Wing – With the nod from the Federal Aviation Administration, Wing will be the first company licensed to use drone deliveries from a business to a residence. The approval comes after the company completed over 70,000 test flights. Surprisingly, the certification came from regulations that typically cover charter flights.
And this week’s "Where's My Freight?!"



