Migrants and European supply chains

euractivTruckers caught up in Europe’s migrant crisis say business is increasingly disrupted by queues and stowaways, but they are far more worried governments will step up border controls. In a worst case scenario this could mean serious supply chain disruptions or supply chain delays if EU governments decide to make border crossings more difficult than today.

Schengen about to be scrapped?

Europe is currently facing a major migrant crisis, so severe that there is already a Wikipedia entry for European migrant crisis. While this is first and foremost a humanitarian issue, there could be potential supply chain consequences, as an article on euractiv.com reports, stating that Haulers fear migrant crisis:

Truckers caught up in Europe’s migrant crisis say business is increasingly disrupted by queues and stowaways, but they are far more worried governments will step up border controls.

If the border-free zone within Europe were to disintegrate or be scrapped, it would call into question not only the road haulage industry’s own, time-sensitive business model but the supply chains of industries across the continent, they say.

The article on euractiv.com paints a rather frightening picture of what could possibly happen if the worst hit EU countries decide to enforce stricter controls, let alone close their borders completely. That would bring us back to the days we still had passport checks, document controls, crosschecks, and all of this increasing the waiting time for border crossings to hours at best and days at worst.

Are we heading in the right or wrong direction?

This brings to mind what I highlighted in a previous post on cross-border supply chains:



The vulnerabilities of international supply chains will increase in the future, driven by various external hazards and risks, lean operational models as well as changes imposed by regulatory countermeasures. Companies are particularly concerned about future disruptions in material supply and transportation, which will have negative impact on just-in-time operations.

That post was written in 2011, and now, 4 years on, “the vulnerabilities of international supply chains” has definitely increased, albeit migrants were probably not the shortlist of possible future vulnerabilities at that time.

Links:

Related posts

Posted in THIS and THAT
Tags: , ,

ARTICLES and PAPERS
Supply Chain Risk Management in six steps
Supply management is not just about acquiring goods and services at the best possible price. It's al[...]
Friend or foe or both?
Realities of supply chain collaboration
Supply chain collaboration, easy or difficult? And can it really work? In theory yes, but in reality[...]
BOOKS and BOOK CHAPTERS
Book Review: Operations Rules
Operations Rules by David Simchi-Levi comes with an ambiguous title. You can read this two ways: 1) [...]
Book Review: Research Methodologies in SCM
Is there something like the right research design for supply chain studies? I believe there is, and [...]
REPORTS and WHITEPAPERS
Infrastructure - essential for competitiveness?
Regular readers of this blog may have noticed my regular rants about the state of the Norwegian infr[...]
Hiperos - the Integrated View of Supplier Risk
Supply chains have gone global. No longer are they a point-to-chain of goods flowing from a source t[...]