SCDigest
Editorial Staff
SCDigest Says: |
The costs for insurance, security, and increasingly fancy gear, such as GPS tracking on trailers or containers, continue to rise apace with the increase in cargo theft.
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Across the globe, cargo robberies and hijackings are increasing in frequency, violence, and sophistication.
Once largely the province of amateurs, the practice is now largely run by professionals, with hundreds of known gangs in Europe alone. A relatively modest problem in the US, cargo theft is a major and growing problem in many parts of Europe, South America, Malaysia and Mexico – and increasingly violent.
“Our trucks always travel in Mexico with an armed guard,” a director of transportation for GM told SCDigest last year.
Mexican Problem Escalating
With a huge chunk of Mexican government and police resources tied up in the fight against the drug cartels there, thieves are ramping up their efforts to steal freight, says a story today from Reuter’s news.
The thieves not only carry heavy fire power, but increasingly sophisticated equipment to unload the stolen cargo and move it quickly to the black market. Everything from steel to coffee to food products is being targeted.
Reuters says, for example, that Altos Hornos de Mexico (AHMSA), the country’s third largest steel maker, has been victim of nearly 40 robberies since January 2008.
The fact that steel is among the targets says something itself. In order to unload heavy rolls or steel and find markets for them, “You have to be really well organized," an AHMSA executive says.
A steel industry association in the country says robberies against its members rose by 250 percent in 2008, making away with some 12,500 tons of steel worth some $11 million. The pace has been maintained or accelerated in 2009.
(Transportation Management Article - Continued Below)
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