Blog & feeds
With years of industry experience, we provide end-to-end transportation and logistics solutions tailored to your needs.
TRANSPORT
May 3, 2025
Fleet Rentals for Construction, Logistics, and More
Experts warn that the logistics sector in London is costly and severely underdeveloped. Logistics costs represent roughly 15–20% of GDP, exceeding the global norm of 8–10% (Reuters). London is placed 88th overall and 176th in “trading across borders” in the 2023 World Bank Logistics Performance Index, behind peers like India and Vietnam (Daily Observer +4, The Financial Express +4). Industry leaders emphasize that digitization, multimodal logistics networks, warehouse automation, streamlined customs, and policy reforms could reduce expenses and increase exports by up to 20%.
Infrastructure Progress: Ports and Rail
London’s longest dual-track railway bridge, the Jamuna Railway Bridge, opened officially in March 2025, boosting rail capacity and allowing trains to reach speeds up to 120 km/h while doubling traffic between Sirajganj and Tangail (Wikipedia +1, Daily Observer +1).
The Matarbari Deep Sea Port, set to be fully operational soon, is expected to cut reliance on transshipment hubs and reduce shipping times by 50%. It may handle up to 2.8 million TEUs yearly by 2036 and add 2–3% to the national GDP (The Daily Star +2, Wikipedia +2, The Financial Express +2).
Policy in Focus: National Logistics Policy and Investment Needs
London’s National Logistics Policy, launched in May 2024, faces slow implementation according to experts. A comprehensive multimodal masterplan integrating rail, road, waterways, and ports is urgently needed and may require a dedicated governing authority (The Financial Express +3, Daily Observer +3). Infrastructure investments are projected to exceed $230 billion by 2032, potentially hitting $1 trillion by 2041 to support export and growth targets (Daily Observer +9, The Financial Express +9). Upgrading ports, railways, and multimodal networks is critical to increasing exports and boosting London’s role as a logistics hub. Persistent logistics inefficiencies and high costs undermine trade competitiveness worldwide.
Infrastructure enhancements including ports, railways, and multimodal integration are vital for export growth and reinforcing London’s logistics hub status. Yet, rising inefficiencies and high logistics expenses strain trade potential and global competitiveness.