The Scotsman

Mixed picture for Royal Mail

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

Royal Mail’s p ostal workers delivered 1.1 billion fewer letters in the five months after lockdown started, as the business saw a strong swing to parcel deliveries instead.

The company said it had carried 28 per cent fewer letters, but saw a 34 per cent rise in parcels. Its delivery vans took 177 million more parcels to customers’ front doors in the months from the beginning of the financial year in April.

“In the first five months of the year, we have seen a substantia­l shift in our business from letters to parcels,” the company said in an update to shareholde­rs yesterday.

Revenue from letters dropped 21.5 per cent, while parcel revenue rose 33.1 per cent, meaning total revenue increased by £139 million.

However, all was not good as the company clocked up costs of £85m from the increased difficulti­es around handling more parcels.

“Whilst this has driven better-than- expected revenues, as discussed previously, our legacy in letters has held back operationa­l changes needed to adapt our business to a market that has fewer letters and more parcels,” bosses said.

This was added to £75m costs in the five months because of the C ovid -19 pandemic, as absence levels rose, physical distancing slowed work, and the company had to fork out for protective equipment.

While parcel revenues were far ahead of expectatio­ns, Royal Mail’s long-term decline in profitabil­ity was not halted and the business will make a “material loss” this financial year. The unit “will not become profitable without substantia­l business change”.

In order to change, Royal Mail is talking to its unions in a bid to adapt the business.

“Currently, too many parcels are sorted by hand and we are failing to adapt our business to fundamenta­lly lower letter volumes and are holding on to outdated working practices and a delivery structure that no longer meets customer needs,” it said.

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