The National - News

Expo 2020 logistics a mega project in itself

▶ The world’s largest cargo plane and special lorries are just part of the operation, writes Ramola Talwar Badam

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Transporti­ng equipment from across the world to make the Expo 2020 Dubai site ready for the world’s fair has been a mammoth operation. Articulate­d lorries requiring special permission moved extra-long building material on motorways in Europe by night.

Special cargo planes were hired to carry heavy projectors made in Mexico.

Everything from constructi­on supplies for futuristic buildings to high-tech robots that will greet visitors has reached the vast Dubai South site over the past three years.

Alan Williams, UPS vice president Expo 2020 sponsorshi­p and operations, gave The National a glimpse into what it takes to deliver the requiremen­ts of more than 190 participat­ing countries.

Inside the company’s sprawling warehouse in Jebel Ali Free Zone, a large section is stacked with hundreds of thousands of crates and boxes marked for delivery to the Expo site.

At another warehouse on the site, four 12-metre shipping containers have been modified to store goods that can be sent quickly in an area the size of more than 600 football fields.

The company drew on its experience as the official logistics provider for the 2012 London and 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Transporti­ng the 21-metre tall portals that overlook three Expo entrances was the biggest logistics project of the event and involved several countries.

“It was one of the most complex supply chains that I have ever been involved in,” says Mr Williams, who has worked with UPS for more than three decades.

“We had to put in place specialist equipment, extendable trailers.

“Due to the length we had to get special permission­s to drive from Germany up to Antwerp.

“We could drive only at night time on the autobahns with escort vehicles. It was very spectacula­r but also very challengin­g.”

The wire mesh-like gates were carefully placed in trucks for the 780-kilometre road trip from Bavaria, in southern Germany, to the port of Antwerp.

Packed in wooden crates, the Arab mashrabiya-style structures designed by British architect Asif Khan were then shipped from Belgium to Jebel Ali Port.

The company moved one consignmen­t a month and it took nine shipments in 2019 for the three sets of gigantic doors to reach Dubai.

Meanwhile, the world’s biggest cargo aircraft was chartered several times to deliver 11 projectors.

The devices are crucial to beaming images at night on to Al Wasl Plaza’s 360-degree steel trellis dome.

Each projector, weighing more than 46 tonnes, was lifted into the belly of the planes under expert supervisio­n.

Manufactur­ed in Monterrey, Mexico, the projectors were taken by road to Houston, Texas, and flown to Dubai.

“Due to their size and packaging, these were too big to go in a UPS aircraft, so we actually chartered an aircraft, the largest cargo aircraft in the world, from Houston to Dubai and then flew into DWC airport,” Mr Williams says.

“It sounds simplistic, five shipments in total, but it took a lot of planning.”

The dome, described as the crown jewel of the Expo, will be the venue for the opening ceremony.

It will also be a space for art shows and music performanc­es during the day. At sunset, the translucen­t dome will be illuminate­d with images beamed by the projectors.

Expo officials have said that more than 100 robots will greet visitors, deliver food, help with directions and take photograph­s.

Opti, a golden robot known as the guardian of the Opportunit­y Pavilion, is an Expo mascot.

These robots, manufactur­ed in China, were among hightech machinery transporte­d to the Dubai site.

UPS will show off a fourwheel e-quad and a threewheel e-bike to the public as part of its plan to use these later in crowded cities.

“The concept behind this vehicle is to operate in pedestrian­ised areas,” Mr Williams says.

“The width, length and safety features around the actual bike itself are aimed to operate it safely in industrial­ised areas.”

The rider can pedal the bike and batteries will kick in when it encounters a slope or a heavy load. Pedalling recharges the battery.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has shown how preparing for a health crisis should be part of disaster planning, Mr Williams says.

“The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic has tested the resilience of supply chains, and logistics providers have needed to urgently adapt,” he says.

“Pandemic preparedne­ss has gone from an experts’ discussion in the side room of a government planning apparatus to a whole-of-government, whole-of-world priority.

“A local, regional or global health crisis needs to be a routine part of disaster preparedne­ss going forward.”

UPS worked closely with countries to work out which supplies must reach Dubai first. They started with constructi­on-related material, then moved to fit-out supplies for the pavilions and are now stocking interiors.

“My first time at the site was probably in the middle of 2016 and at that stage it was just a desert with a couple of trucks rumbling across,” Mr Williams says. “So to come here now and see the portals, the amazing pavilions of countries and also the thematic pavilions, it’s just incredible. I find this exciting to see this rise up out of the desert.

“This is something that really motivates my team because it’s such a special event. It makes us really proud to be part of Expo 2020.”

It took nine months to ship to Dubai the three, 21-metre gateways that will greet visitors to the world’s fair

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 ?? Photos UPS ?? Clockwise from top: the gateways that will welcome visitors to the Expo 2020 site in Dubai; special equipment was used to carry sections of the 21-metre tall portals; sections of the gateways were taken on articulate­d lorries from Germany to Antwerp; and the world’s biggest cargo aircraft was chartered to carry projectors, each weighing more than 46 tonnes, from Mexico
Photos UPS Clockwise from top: the gateways that will welcome visitors to the Expo 2020 site in Dubai; special equipment was used to carry sections of the 21-metre tall portals; sections of the gateways were taken on articulate­d lorries from Germany to Antwerp; and the world’s biggest cargo aircraft was chartered to carry projectors, each weighing more than 46 tonnes, from Mexico

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