Home Fleetwatch 2018 Business interruption cited as top transportation concern

Business interruption cited as top transportation concern

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Allianz risk: The interruption of business operations by various factors - like accidents, fire and natural disasters - has a tremendous effect on revenue in transportation and has emerged as the top risk concern in the Allianz Risk Barometer 2018 report published annually by Allianz Global Corporate & Speciality (AGCS).
Allianz risk: The interruption of business operations by various factors - like accidents, fire and natural disasters - has a tremendous effect on revenue in transportation and has emerged as the top risk concern in the Allianz Risk Barometer 2018 report published annually by Allianz Global Corporate & Speciality (AGCS).

The trucking industry faces many risks on a daily basis and FleetWatch thought readers would find it interesting to read that in terms of the wider, total transportation industry, ‘business interruption’ has emerged as a top risk concern.

This was highlighted in the Allianz Risk Barometer 2018, a report published annually by Allianz Global Corporate & Speciality (AGCS), where 37% of responses from a record 1 911 risk experts from 80 countries cited ‘business interruption’ as their top concern.

Theft, fraud and corruption – with 32% of responses – came in at #2. This is up from #3 in 2017. Cyber incidents at #3 with 29% responses and natural catastrophes at #4 with 25% responses are, according to the report, new emerging threats. Changes in legislation and regulation are #5 at 24% and have moved down from #4 in 2017.

The interruption of business operations by various factors – like accidents, fire and natural disasters – has a tremendous effect on revenue in transportation. In South Africa, this is often caused by high road and rail accidents. South African roads are known to be high risk, especially over the festive and holiday periods.

Although the 2017/2018 festive period deaths toll figures decreased by 11% to 1 527, the number is still very high, consequentially making the roads unsafe and transportation very risky. The complexity of ‘getting back to business’, is often underestimated by companies and bottlenecks can also affect their emergency plans.

The Railway Safety Regulator, which is heavily involved in investigating rail accidents, reported that a majority of their accidents emerge from collisions and derailments. The regulator also pointed to the accidents as consequences of operational risks such as human error and disruption of operations but nonetheless cost the operator millions of Rands in operational losses. Vandalism has also become a common problem in the rail and road networks.

And here’s something interesting. The maritime sector is no exception to risks associated with the disruption of operations. Last year saw a further decrease in the number of piracy incidents recorded as only 191 incidents were reported globally. This was down from 246 in 2015.

According to the report, this is the lowest total recorded since 1998 and reflects the successful measures taken to contain the threat of Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean. However, other risk challenges remain, such as the rise in crew kidnappings in parts of West Africa.

Theft, fraud and corruption is a huge challenge across many sectors. However, due to the large amounts of money circulating in transportation, it makes it more susceptible to this risk.

Also, the threat of cyber-attacks continues to be significant. Most attacks to date have been aimed at breaching corporate security rather than taking control of a vessel. “The shipping sector doesn’t have a particularly heightened risk awareness when it comes to cyber. As no major incident due to a cyber-attack has taken place yet, many in the industry are still complacent about the risks,” says Captain Rahul Khanna, Head of Marine Risk Consulting at AGCS.

As many as 80 percent of offshore security breaches are estimated to be down to human error. “IT security should not be put on the backburner. If hackers were able to take control of a large container ship on a strategically important route, they could block transits for a long period of time, causing significant economic damage.”

In South Africa, changes in legislation and regulation may cause uncertainty for many industries particularly the airline industry that is comparatively the most regulated. The airline industry contributes over R150-billion towards the South African economy. A slight discontinuation of cargo flights due to non-compliance could costs the sector millions in a few hours. Such interruptions may also translate to increased costs of food the same way increased fuel levies and road tolls impact the cost of goods and services.

Commenting on the report, AGCS Africa CEO Thusang Mahlangu says modern supply chains and multimodal distribution pose truly global challenges. “Insurance companies like Allianz can respond to these challenges with worldwide cover and insurance solutions for all aspects of the transport and logistics industry.”

He reckons it is important for businesses in transportation to have operational risk management support through a risk consulting network, advice in worldwide infrastructure transport logistics (including delay in start-up), engineering, supply chain and logistics risk, as well as cargo security, packaging and industry best practices as part of their risk management plan.

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