
Author
James Miller specializes in global logistics and supply chain dynamics. His investigative work explores the intricacies of international trade, infrastructure challenges, and technological advancements shaping modern commerce. He advocates for sustainable practices and transparency in supply chain operations.

Averitt’s 2026 Network Upgrade: Jackson, Columbia, Oklahoma City and Tulsa Expansions
Averitt will add 379 dock doors, 1,953 truck parking spaces and roughly 895,530 square feet of warehouse space across several U.S.

Hyundai Builds Massive AI GPU Farm, Robot Factory and Hydrogen Facility in Saemangeum
Hyundai will build a 5.8 trillion-won AI data center equipped with 50,000 GPUs at Saemangeum to accelerate autonomous vehicle software, robot learning and connected manufacturing workflows.

How Hyperscience Turns Delivery Documents into Faster Freight Revenue
A mid-size carrier handling 3,000 loads per month typically ingests 4–6 documents per load — meaning roughly 12,000–18,000 document validations every month before a single invoice can be issued.

DOJ Files to Seize the Tanker Skipper and Almost Two Million Barrels of Oil
The U.S. Justice Department filed a civil forfeiture complaint seeking title to the oil tanker Skipper and roughly 2 million barrels of petroleum seized off Venezuela in December, marking a legal escalation with direct implications for maritime routing, port operations, and international supply-chain custody. What the filing does legally and operationally The complaint initiates a formal process to transfer ownership from the vessel's operators to the U.S. government, allowing a federal judge to authorize sale or disposal of the cargo. From a logistics standpoint, that legal step changes chain-of-custody timelines, insurance exposures, and the immediate availability of crude for refinery

North Bay CMV sweep: 26 trucks checked, 4 removed from service and 27 charges laid
On Feb. 25 in North Bay, Ontario, law enforcement teams conducted 26 commercial motor vehicle (CMV) inspections — including 17 Level 1 inspections — which resulted in 27 charges and the removal of 4 vehicles from service (roughly 15% OOS). Inspection breakdown and immediate findings The operation was a joint effort by the North Bay Police Service, the Ontario Provincial Police, and the Ontario Ministry of Transportation. Officers documented a range of defects that directly affect roadworthiness and commercial shipment safety. Metric Count Vehicles inspected 26 Level 1 inspections 17 Charges laid 27 Vehicles removed from service 4 Approx. % OOS 15% Most common defects found Defective or

Jennifer Homendy Criticizes House ALERT Bill for Diluting ADS‑B In Requirements After Jan. 29, 2025 Midair Collision
Federal rulemaking timelines to mandate ADS‑B In and the best available locator technology could extend equipment compliance by 18–36 months, reshaping route assignments and operational windows for carriers and freight operators in the Washington, D.C.

ACT Research signals cautious optimism as flatbed spot rates rip higher
Flatbed spot rates have climbed in 13 of the last 14 weeks, reaching levels not seen since spring 2022, while total load postings hit their highest point since July 2022 and the Market Demand Index moved to 145.0.

How digital compliance tools like LAR Verify are changing live animal transport operations
The US CDC’s 2024 rule change on dog imports, implemented with a three-month window, exposed how quickly carriers must adjust booking and acceptance processes for live animals.

How spot-market mechanics, broker vetting, and legal shifts shape carrier selection and on-road safety
Spot-market tender rejection rates surpassed 13% during the late‑2025 peak season, pushing an unprecedented volume of loads into brokers’ hands and increasing the likelihood that freight lands with carriers who answer solely on price.

Canada Warns Possible Annual USMCA Reviews Could Disrupt Investment and Cross‑Border Trade
Tariff exemptions for key commodities currently mask a growing operational risk: Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc warned that a shift to annual review cycles for the USMCA could inject sustained uncertainty into cross‑border freight flows, particularly in the auto, steel, aluminum and lumber corridors between Canada and the U.S.

Underwriting losses and alleged fraud strain Illinois Commercial Auto Assigned Risk Plan and carrier markets
The Illinois Commercial Auto Assigned Risk Plan has recorded a combined ratio approaching 191% as of Q2 2025, meaning the program is paying roughly $1.91 for every dollar of premium collected.

Emirates SkyCargo ramps up India freighter network with new Mumbai and Ahmedabad services
Emirates SkyCargo will increase its India freighter footprint from three to five weekly dedicated freighters, adding one new freighter route to Mumbai (via Dubai–Singapore) and one direct freighter to Ahmedabad, together contributing to an average uplift of roughly 3,000 tonnes per week across the market.
