Santa Fe New Mexican

Online shopping surge faces shipping challenges

Estimated 3 billion packages expected to hit mail system this holiday season

- By Michael Corkery and Sapna Maheshwari

E-commerce became a lifeline for consumers and companies during the pandemic. But this holiday season, online shopping will strain the industry as never before: An estimated 3 billion packages will course through the nation’s shipping infrastruc­ture — about 800 million more than delivered last year.

This flood of packages is hitting shipping companies at the end of a year of frenzied demand for everyday household items by a public largely stuck at home and wary of doing its buying in person. The deliveries could make or break some smaller retailers already on the edge financiall­y because of lockdowns and fewer customers in their stores.

Packages that don’t arrive by Christmas will be a disappoint­ment for customers but a disaster for these struggling retailers, which have been forced by the coronaviru­s pandemic to rebuild their business around e-commerce. The future of retailing is increasing­ly online, and companies don’t want to give customers any reason to think they can’t deliver.

“Everyone is preparing for the worst and holding their breath,” said Ravi Shanker, a transporta­tion analyst at Morgan Stanley. “It is far easier to lose at peak shipping than to win.”

To cope with the surge, the large shipping companies have expanded weekend deliveries and hired more workers. They have also played hardball with retailers, introducin­g steep holiday surcharges on shipments and enforcing strict limits on how many packages companies can send out each day.

FedEx and UPS, the biggest private U.S. carriers, have enormous leverage over how many packages will be delivered and when, and some retailers worry about pushing back against their demands for fear of being cut off.

But the carriers are also under pressure, largely from Amazon, which has been building out its own logistics business and is becoming increasing­ly independen­t in shipping. If more retailers falter this holiday, that only strengthen­s Amazon’s dominance.

By one accounting, 7.2 million more packages need to be shipped each day this holiday season than the system has the capacity to handle.

That figure came from ShipMatrix, which provides technology to the shipping industry. Its president, Satish Jindel, said expanded weekend deliveries were covering part of that shortfall, “but not all of it.”

“Demand exceeds capacity, no matter what part of the country you are in,” he said.

Many brands, both large and small, have yanked forward order deadlines for customers who want to receive items by Christmas and posted reminders on their websites to order early.

Beatrice Bakery in Beatrice, Neb., which expects to sell 750,000 pounds of fruitcake this holiday, set a cutoff of Dec. 9 — nearly a week earlier than last year — while the Disney Store is advertisin­g a Dec. 10 deadline.

Typically, shipping volumes during the holidays are 30 percent to 40 percent higher than at other times of the year. But those levels were being reached this year long before people started buying Christmas gifts. Even Amazon struggled to keep up with the demand in the early days of the pandemic.

The shipping companies say they are better prepared for the holidays. FedEx said it was hiring 70,000 seasonal employees, and UPS said it would hire 100,000. That expansion pales next to the preparatio­n at Amazon, which said it was building 100 new fulfillmen­t warehouses, sorting centers and delivery facilities across North America. The company has hired 275,000 full-time and parttime workers since the start of the year and 100,000 seasonal workers to handle the increased volume.

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