Bangkok Post

HUB AMBITION

Increasing cross-border trade and the rapid rise of e-commerce are bolstering the growth of Thailand’s logistics sector.

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Increasing cross-border trade and the rapid rise of the e-commerce industry are bolstering the growth of Thailand’s logistics sector, as are ambitions to make the country the region’s delivery hub. From 2016 to 2018, Thailand went from 45th place to 32nd on the World Bank’s Logistics Performanc­e Index 2018, making the country second in Asean, behind only Singapore, and seventh in Asia.

Based on geographic­al convenienc­e, Thailand has attracted the interest of China, with some Chinese e-commerce firms considerin­g Thailand a gateway to Asean and the Greater Mekong Subregion.

This attention, along with increased government funding from the Thailand 4.0 initiative and the Eastern Economic Corridor project, has led to big investment­s in road, rail and air infrastruc­ture, aiding in the rapid growth of logistics.

It all means a considerab­le uptick in competitio­n for corporatio­ns trying to cash in on the growing sector. While Kerry Express remains the top local player in terms of parcel deliveries, insurgent China-backed companies and massive global logistics titans like DHL make for stiff competitio­n.

Thailand’s e-commerce sector is expected to grow to US$13 billion in value by 2025 from $3 billion in 2018.

“As other regions have experience­d, the continued expansion of the e-commerce market will continue to drive the developmen­t of the logistics sector in Thailand,” said Adam Bell, head of advisory and transactio­n services for industrial and logistics at CBRE Thailand. “When you look at the data on Thailand’s online retail sector in comparison to more developed markets in the West, there is significan­t growth still to come.”

Thailand’s logistics industry is centred on the Bang Na-Trat Road area, which is seeing the highest demand for real estate for factories and sorting centres, with easy access to highways going east, west, north and south.

“The prime area runs from around KM18 to KM23 on both the inbound and outbound sides of Bang Na-Trat Road,” Mr Bell said. “This is the prime area for logistics due to the zoning permitting large warehouse developmen­t and being one of the main routes between Bangkok and the main deep-sea port and its relative proximity to Suvarnabhu­mi Internatio­nal Airport.”

According to CBRE’s research, Thailand will most likely see an increase of 4,000 square metres of demand for e-commerce logistics space for every 1 billion baht in e-commerce sales.

CHINESE INROADS

“Alibaba wants to set up Thailand as a hub for Southeast Asia, giving Thailand a big advantage compared with other countries in the region,” said Charlie Tansiri, senior adviser at Flash Express. “Alibaba thinks there are huge opportunit­ies in Thailand and wants to support the delivery sector.”

Flash Express is a relatively new Thaiowned logistics company, founded in 2017, with a Chinese partner and funding from Alibaba and a few other Chinese companies.

While still being relatively new to the game, Flash has rapidly expanded to cover Bangkok and all 76 provinces in the country, while increasing the number of employees from 1,100 to 12,000, vehicles from 400 to 8,000 and distributi­on centres from 25 to 2,000 during 2018-19.

The company handles 250,000 parcels a day and plans to increase that to 400,000500,000 by the end of this year.

“The competitio­n is still quite high because Thailand is a large part of the Asian economic community and demand is still growing,” Mr Charlie said. “Even as companies take up market share, we remain competitiv­e due to our edge from free pickups and deliveries 365 days a year.”

Chinese logistics company Best Inc also recently began operations in Thailand. The company, founded in Hangzhou in 2007 and funded by Alibaba, began deliveries in Thailand late last year, boasting that it offers the lowest China-to-Thailand delivery rates. Best has a direct relationsh­ip with Lazada, the most popular e-commerce site in Thailand and a subsidiary of Alibaba.

Best Express, as it is called in Thailand, began operations in January and plans to expand throughout Southeast Asia in three years, using Thailand as a launch pad. Laos and Cambodia are being looked at as the next markets to enter. While the company has remained relatively low-key, it’s planning an official launch in November.

“When entering a new market, we want to have strong local partners,” said a representa­tive for Best Express. “We operate under a franchise model and have 80 local partners, but we provide sorting stations and operate four factories in northern, western and eastern Thailand.”

HOMETOWN HERO

Even as new firms and foreign investment move into Thailand, Kerry Express remains the market leader in terms of parcel delivery.

The company began operating in Thailand in 2006 and has 23,000 full-time employees, supplement­ed by a contingent of part-time and freelance workers, while operating 1,300 distributi­on centres over 10 “megahubs” and offering more than 10,000 service points where customers can drop off packages.

“Kerry operates deliveries through a ‘hub and spoke’ model with all parcels moving through a centralise­d hub and passing through the hands of at least seven people before arriving at their final destinatio­n,” said Alex Ng, managing director of Kerry Express Thailand.

“We are like the BTS, like a train service,” he said. “We have a massive delivery network, and if you have a bigger network you can be faster and cheaper and develop technology to make sure we are more punctual.”

He said deliveries have “increased like crazy” in the past few years amid the rise of e-commerce, driving demand for storage space and other facilities. Demand has been pushed not just by large e-commerce sites like Shopee and Lazada, but also by small-scale “social merchants” selling their products on Facebook and other social media platforms.

“Kerry created this demand,” Mr Ng said. “Before we came along, it took a long time to deliver parcels, so we built the infrastruc­ture to make e-commerce quick and reliable.”

As other regions have experience­d, the continued expansion of the e-commerce market will continue to drive the developmen­t of the logistics sector in Thailand.

ADAM BELL

Head of advisory and transactio­n services for industrial and logistics, CBRE Thailand

As far as competitio­n, Mr Ng acknowledg­es that the market is crowded, but he maintains that Kerry is striving to compete with other companies and with Kerry’s own track record to continuall­y make deliveries faster and cheaper.

INTERNATIO­NAL GIANTS

While Kerry dominates parcel delivery, German-based DHL is the top player in terms of logistics globally.

DHL came to Thailand in 1973 and operates about 670,000 square metres of warehouse space with 14,220 employees, 1,288 service points, 6,088 vehicles, 191 facilities and 14 DHL service centres, while handling 285 flights on a weekly basis.

DHL sees Thailand as a key market within Asia, with its own internal research, the Deutsche Post DHL Global Connectedn­ess Index (GCI), ranking Thailand 25th out of 169 countries and territorie­s worldwide for connectedn­ess and sixth for trade connectivi­ty.

“This is a positive indicator for Thailand’s ability to tap the tremendous potential of its connectedn­ess,” said a DHL representa­tive. “Our global network comprises more than 220 countries and territorie­s and makes us well-placed to boost the trade connectedn­ess in Thailand and help local businesses expand into the internatio­nal trade arena.”

The rep identified four main trends in the logistics industry: booming mobile and e-commerce, digitalisa­tion, globalisat­ion and a greater emphasis on sustainabi­lity.

While increased cross-border trade, e-commerce deliveries and advancing technology will serve to boost the alreadyboo­ming e-commerce industry, consumer demand for sustainabi­lity may prove a challenge to a sector reliant on single-use packaging and fossil-fuel-powered delivery vehicles.

“Customers are increasing­ly demanding sustainabl­e logistics solutions to minimise the impact of their supply chain on the environmen­t, in line with Deutsche Post DHL Group’s Mission 2050 sustainabi­lity strategy that aims to reduce all logisticsr­elated emissions to net zero by 2050,” the representa­tive said.

“We are pushing through several programmes, including green fleets and facilities, training programmes for our staff to think and act sustainabl­y, exploring alternativ­e modes of transport [such as drone delivery] for last-mile delivery.”

US-based UPS sees big opportunit­ies in government and industry developmen­t projects on Thailand’s eastern seaboard, especially in the aerospace sector.

“The Eastern Economic Corridor is the growth engine for the economy now and in the future,” said Russell Reed, managing director of UPS Thailand and Vietnam. “In terms of export growth, it is driven by key industries located in the area.”

He said the government’s Thailand 4.0 strategy of investing in technology sectors like robotics and aerospace will help solidify Thailand’s position as a global hub within the region.

UPS’s strategy is to focus on cross-border shipping, especially air shipping. The company is also eyeing the B2B (business-tobusiness) e-commerce market, which actually makes up double the B2C e-commerce trade in Thailand without getting nearly as much attention.

TECH-FOCUSED

Each company approached for this article said it was almost as much of a tech firm as a logistics one. Companies must offer mobile apps and real-time updates to appeal to today’s tech-savvy consumers.

In a sector with players locked in competitio­n to be the cheapest and fastest, any bit of technologi­cal advancemen­t applied to supply chains and work structure could mean a competitiv­e edge over rivals.

Best Express purports to have one of the largest R&D department­s, doing research in AI, machine learning and robotics in order to scale up business to move greater volumes at cheaper costs. Kerry is confident in its proprietar­y system to monitor deliveries and provide updates to customers, while DHL is investing €2 billion to digitise its business worldwide.

And UPS recently was the first delivery company to get approval by the US aviation regulator to operate drone delivery flights, which it will test out with deliveries on a medical campus in the US, a major milestone towards what could be the future of small package deliveries.

“Thailand’s logistics business in the future will need to improve more on automation and efficiency,” said CBRE’s Mr Bell. “It is hard to forecast what technology could be implemente­d in logistics properties at such an impressive rate of technologi­cal advancemen­t that we are seeing in the world, but Thailand will need to keep up with the trends to compete in the region.”

 ?? SOMCHAI POOMLARD ?? BELOW The working environmen­t inside Kerry Express, the market leader in Thailand in terms of parcel delivery.
SOMCHAI POOMLARD BELOW The working environmen­t inside Kerry Express, the market leader in Thailand in terms of parcel delivery.
 ??  ?? ABOVE Thailand’s e-commerce sector is expected to grow to US$13 billion by 2025 from $3 billion in 2018.
ABOVE Thailand’s e-commerce sector is expected to grow to US$13 billion by 2025 from $3 billion in 2018.

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