China Daily

Tech system will quicken logistics pace

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

DHL Supply Chain and Huawei Technologi­es jointly launched a Narrowband Internet of Things, or NB-IoT, applicatio­n for improving logistics at manufactur­ing sites on Wednesday at an automotive site in Liuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

The applicatio­n is also aimed at raising the efficiency of the domestic logistics industry, the executives concerned said.

Supported by a range of industrial multimedia IoT protocols and interfaces, it offers connectivi­ty, smart operations and device management functions at manufactur­ing sites.

“Waiting time for drivers will be halved from an average of 40 minutes to 20 minutes, and risks of manufactur­ing delays are significan­tly reduced as materials arrive in time and resources are optimized by the IoT solution,” said Markus Voss, chief informatio­n officer and chief operating officer of DHL Supply Chain.

Leveraging existing infrastruc­ture and limited investment­s, the IoT solution is designed to facilitate and streamline yard management for inbound-to-manufactur­ing logistics, which can significan­tly improve inbound processing time at the site, said Voss.

According to Zou Yin, CEO of DHL Supply Chain Greater China, the NB-IoT solution has been developed by adapting technologi­es of Huawei and China Mobile.

“Exploring new technologi­es like NB-IoT is one of many ways we are forging forward with our digitaliza­tion journey in China,” said Zou.

“The cross-industry effort made by Huawei and DHL has enlightene­d industrial players to find a way out amid the fragmented logistics industry battling all these years with high cost due to the uneven resources, supply and demand of products,” said Lin Guolong, director of the Shanghai Maritime University Logistics Research Center.

Lin said the fast developmen­t of e-commerce requires logistics to be more efficient and approachab­le, with higher service standard and lower cost. Despite its fast growth, logistics cost stays high; so, intelligen­t logistics via the IoT seems to be the answer.

The 2016 Commerce Logistics Operations Report released by the Ministry of Commerce said a total of 11.1 trillion yuan ($1.7 trillion) was spent on logistics last year, up 2.9 percent year-on-year and accounting for 14.9 percent of the GDP.

The percentage is much higher than 6.5 percent of the United States, Japan and Germany, and 3.5 percentage points higher than the global average.

“The high logistics cost, the warehouse land price as well as the management cost are the biggest hurdles confrontin­g China’s logistics developmen­t,” Sun Xiaobo, a professor specializi­ng in logistics from Beijing Normal University, was quoted as saying by Modern Logistics News.

The Liuzhou project is also an effort to cash in on the additional value from the IoT-applied internatio­nal logistics industry.

“By 2025, the internet of things will have the potential to generate up to 1.77 trillion euros ($2.12 trillion) in additional value for the internatio­nal logistics industry. Our goal is to enable a more integrated logistics value chain through greater connectivi­ty, enhancing the customer experience,” said Voss.

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