Business Standard

Cargo firm wants to build an Uber for shipping

- P R SANJAI

Allcargo Logistics is emulating Uber Technologi­es to boost its business of sharing marine containers.

A unit of the Mumbaibase­d Allcargo, ECU Worldwide, which aggregates orders from clients, plans to use Uber’s model to make it easier for clients to book marine freight.

Allcargo, which reported a drop in profit in four of the past five quarters, is betting on technology to revive volumes and take on overseas rivals such as DHL Worldwide Express in Asia’s third-largest economy. The time may be right for the company as India’s logistics infrastruc­ture improves. The nation jumped 19 positions to 35 in the World Bank’s logistics performanc­e including infrastruc­ture, customs and timeliness.

“Internet companies like the Ubers of the world have successful­ly converted their aggregatio­n model with robust technology infrastruc­ture,” Allcargo Chairman Shashi Kiran Shetty said in an interview last week. “The idea is to help its customers to make it simple to conduct their business with ECU Worldwide, from any corner of the world through their devices.”

Allcargo — which claims to be India’s largest integrated logistics services provider in the private sector — has seen its shares fall 31 percent this year, while profit dropped about 30 percent in the three months ended December. ECU accounts for 80 per cent of Allcargo’s revenue.

“The Uber modeling in consolidat­ed cargo logistics is an ambitious and innovative move,” said Mathew Antony, managing partner of Mumbai-based Aditya Consulting, an advisory firm specialisi­ng in infrastruc­ture, logistics and real estate industries.

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