Increasing utilization on existing capacity to avoid large infrastructure spending:
Meeting the growing urban delivery demand fuelled by growing e-commerce (10% p.a.). Only 30-40% of the population shopped online in most EU countries in 2013, yet they are projected to reach 70-80% in the coming years. Such demand growth will create a need for high urban investments.
- Solving the inefficient last-mile problem for logistics companies. The last-mile problem accounts for a staggering 53-75% of total parcel delivery costs (see Aurum, Credit Suisse, 17 Oct 2016 e-commerce logistics, and Characteristics of innovations in last mile logistics -University of Antwerp, department of Transport and Regional Economics) . Also called a “ping-pong problem”, logistics operators make several empty runs.
- Supporting new business models for low-cost urban mobility.
- Enabling neighbourhood to cross country cargo delivery systems, logistics capacity sharing, car sharing, carpooling, demand-responsive transport, etc.
- Supporting healthy growth of e-commerce by decreasing delivery costs. 68% of e-buyers stated “delivery-related” problems as the core reason they did not complete their orders. Also, 19% of buyers stated that they would shop online more if shipping was cheaper.
- Supporting cross-country commerce across Europe. A third of EU population lives across borders with the ever-growing cross-border daily commute volumes each year. Yet, according to a survey by eBay in UK, France and Germany, 78% of merchandisers identify delivery costs as the main obstacle to cross-border e-commerce, while 42% refer to bad quality of delivery services.
-Promoting higher environmental and safety standards for logistics:
- Decreasing local truck traffic and therefore lowering GHG and CO2 emissions2. Freight transport generates between 20 and 60 percent (depending on the pollutants considered) of local transport-based pollution.
- Lowering fatal accidents caused by trucks. Trucks were involved in an overwhelming total (43%) of bicyclists’ deaths on Greater London roads between 1992 and 2006 (Morgan et al., 2010).
DynaHUBS will address all the issues above at a very low cost and increase the overall efficiency of the logistics sector. We will be among the companies that help European transport system to meet the 2030 and 2050 targets set out in the Transport White Paper.