New Transport Secretary must back logistics to support growth mission, says Logistics UK

London, UK: The new Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander must seize the opportunity to “drive Labour’s growth mission by prioritising logistics and acknowledging its foundational role in the economy”, according to Logistics UK. The comments follow the resignation of former Transport Secretary Louise Haigh.

Logistics UK chief executive David Wells said that by appointing herself ‘Passenger in Chief’, Haigh failed to recognise the role of commercial transport in delivering the government’s top growth mission, or how to leverage logistics and supply chains to achieve this.

“The vision for the Integrated National Transport Strategy, launched on 28 November, was not integrated as it did not include logistics, a major user and provider of our transport networks.

“Heidi Alexander, as the new Secretary of State for Transport, has a huge opportunity to address the decline in logistics productivity, drive growth and secure the sector’s place in the forthcoming Industrial Strategy, including through a genuinely integrated transport strategy that meets the needs of the travelling public while facilitating the efficient movement of freight.

“The sector contributes £185bn to the economy every year and employs 8% of the UK workforce, and research from Oxford Economics shows that by establishing the right partnerships, regulations and investment for logistics, the government can deliver productivity gains that will boost the UK economy by up to £8bn per year by 2030*.

“But congestion and delays, friction at our borders, and a lack of public investment over time is making UK logistics less efficient. The World Bank Logistics Productivity Index shows that the UK has slipped from 4th in the world to 19th in the last 10 years.

“Logistics UK has identified the key transport corridors and critical routes for investment and is pressing the Treasury and the Department for Transport to better identify the UK’s strategic logistics network, and use this as the basis of a 30-year infrastructure strategy for freight to turbocharge growth across the whole economy.”