Logistics Business Magazine, September 2025

The September 2025 issue of Logistics Business magazine is packed with insights into the technologies, strategies and solutions reshaping global supply chains. A strong focus is placed on artificial intelligence and automation, with Samsara showcasing its latest driver safety and fleet optimisation tech from the Beyond event in San Diego. Further AI coverage includes interviews with Coupa’s international head and Transporeon, both exploring how data-driven platforms are transforming spend management and freight visibility.

Supply chain strategy takes centre stage in an exclusive interview with Siemens’ Alexander Tschentscher, who advocates a shift from reactive resilience to strategic robustness. Meanwhile, Ewals Cargo Care shares how its “warehouse on wheels” model and modal shift approach are reducing emissions while expanding operations across Europe. Port innovation is also in the spotlight as PEMA President Achim Dries outlines how ports and terminals are digitising, automating, and gradually weaning off diesel in favour of electrification and smart power management.

Inside the warehouse, automation continues to surge. Hyster discusses its big-truck innovations at TOC Europe, and a new automated distribution centre in Coventry demonstrates what’s possible in modern DC design. Case studies from CLAAS, Axfood, and others show how internal logistics and fulfilment strategies are evolving to meet increasingly complex demands.

Sustainability is another dominant theme throughout this edition. The magazine looks at how plastic pallets, automated packaging and green fuels—such as HVO used by DHL’s Formula 1 fleet—are cutting carbon without compromising performance. E-commerce brands like Bathroom Mountain and major supply chain software providers such as Soloplan and IFS also feature prominently, revealing how automation, AI and smart planning tools are supporting faster, leaner, and more resilient operations.

From warehouse doors to multimodal transport, and from predictive software to people-centric AI, this issue offers a comprehensive and engaging snapshot of the forces shaping logistics in 2025.

Pedestrian Awareness Camera added to Forklifts

Yale Lift Truck Technologies has announced a new pedestrian awareness camera solution, the latest addition to the Yale Reliant™ portfolio of active alert and assist technologies, which are designed to boost operator awareness and help support overall warehouse safety. The pedestrian awareness camera system can accurately identify pedestrians at ranges up to 6 metres through a 120-degree field of view and provides automatic alerts to the lift truck operator when a pedestrian is detected.

“Operator awareness is a foundational element of lift truck and pedestrian safety, and the Yale Reliant technology portfolio is designed to provide a helping hand for warehouses facing an increasingly transient labour pool and inexperienced lift truck operators,” says Daniel Heap, Manager, Product & Commercial – Technology & Connected Fleet, for Yale Lift Truck Technologies. “We’re continuing to target the challenges of real-world warehouse environments with research and development, and the pedestrian awareness camera solution offers the capability and configurability real-world warehouse environments need.”

Operations can get the camera system with audible and visual alerts only, or take advantage of a third type of notification with the addition of optional traction alerts. Upon pedestrian detection, an audible tone and a light indicates which zone the pedestrian is in, shown on the truck-mounted operator LED Display. Traction alerts go a step further by providing the operator with a perceptible alert through truck deceleration. While the operator remains in ultimate control of the equipment, this deceleration effect is intended to get their attention and encourage action to avoid the detected pedestrian by slowing down, steering away or both.

The pedestrian awareness detection system was developed using extensive amounts of real-world photographic data. It adapts to low light conditions and various environments. The system is optimised for travel speeds of 8 km per hour or less (though higher speeds are available). This gives operators ample time to identify alerts, and to react to avoid contact. The camera is mounted to the rear, forks-trailing side of the lift truck. The audible and traction alerts stop as the truck travels away from the detected pedestrian, and they are no longer in view of the camera.

The pedestrian awareness camera marks the latest addition to the award-winning Yale Reliant lineup of operator assist technologies, which take input from the work environment and equipment to alert operators of potential hazards and adjust lift truck performance. Yale Reliant initially launched globally in 2021, and has since accumulated over 24 million hours of run time on more than 8,300 units deployed in the field.

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Banana Logistics – 9000km to your Basket

Bananas – the most popular fruit in European supermarkets – often travel over 9,000 kilometers and spend nearly a month in transit before reaching our shelves. To arrive fresh, ripe, and affordable, they rely on tightly controlled logistics from farm to store.

From ripening chambers in Rotterdam to refrigerated containers crossing the Atlantic, Girteka Logistics experts explain what it takes to bring exotic fruits like bananas and avocados to tables across Europe.
How Long Does It Take for Bananas to Reach the Stores in Europe?

The time it takes for fruit to reach Europe depends largely on its country of origin. Oranges grown in Spain may arrive in neighbouring markets within a week or even less. But for bananas and avocados sourced from Central or South America, the journey can stretch up to 30 days. Shipments from Asia take even longer — up to a month and a half.

According to Vytautas Oleškevičius, Central European Regional Manager at Girteka, each fruit’s journey involves numerous steps and players along the way. “Avocados are a great example,” he says. “Europe consumes over 1.1 million tonnes of avocados each year. They’re typically grown on small farms, where the growers sell them to exporters. The exporters wash and prepare them for sale, then importers handle logistics to bring the fruit to Europe. Only after all customs procedures are completed do European resellers step in, buying the needed quantities and asking us to transport them.”

Exotic fruits aren’t the only items crossing continents. If you take a closer look at product labels, you’ll find that even vegetables such as carrots, cucumbers, or potatoes can be imported from outside the EU. What may be more surprising is the scale of fruit logistics – in 2024 alone, Girteka transported over 7,000 tons of watermelons across Europe — the equivalent of more than 300 fully loaded trucks.

Keeping Fruit Fresh Across Continents

The journey of bananas from South America to store shelves in Europe requires highly coordinated work involving farmers, suppliers, and logistics companies. Girteka has already delivered over 14,000 truckloads of fruit to 30 European countries this year — more than 300,000 tons. The challenge is not just distance, but maintaining exact transport conditions. Even minor temperature changes can affect fruit quality.


“Our job is to assess and manage all potential risks,” says V. Oleškevičius. “For example, there’s always the risk of pallets or boxes being damaged at some transfer point. Customs inspections must also be considered, and some delays are out of our control. Containers sometimes have to wait three or four days due to heavy traffic. We call these the ‘known unknowns.’ Identifying them helps us address the challenges more effectively.”

It starts in Rotterdam

Most exotic fruit arrives at Rotterdam — Europe’s largest port, handling 400 million tons of cargo annually. Here, companies like Girteka take over. Fruits are sent to logistics centres and loaded onto refrigerated trucks driven across the continent. Even before this, the fruits are already being prepared for the final consumer. On ships, they are kept in containers with temperatures close to zero degrees Celsius.

“Bananas are usually cut while still completely green — totally inedible at that stage,” – says Mantas Briedis, a sales manager at Girteka Logistics. “They must remain unripe throughout the Atlantic journey, or they’d spoil before reaching Lithuania. In Rotterdam, importers place them in ripening chambers. The ripening process continues in the truck, and by the time the truck reaches the stores, the bananas are almost fully ripe.”

What’s Easy vs. What’s Difficult to Transport?

According to experts, the complexity of the process depends on the type of fruit. Fruits vary significantly in sensitivity. Bananas and avocados are relatively easy to transport, which explains their global popularity. Berries, on the other hand, are much more delicate and require highly responsible logistics operations.

“One of the products we transport from Peru is blueberries,” M. Briedis explains. “They’re very delicate, so maintaining the right temperature is an added challenge we take seriously. Because berries spoil faster, they are often flown to Europe rather than shipped. Citrus fruits are also tricky — they’re highly sensitive to condensation. If moisture builds up, the fruit starts to rot.”

In such cases, speed and precision become critical. Drivers play an essential role, ensuring temperature-sensitive cargo is delivered as quickly and safely as possible to prevent spoilage and waste.

The Silent Success of Fruit Logistics

Despite the complexity and numerous risk factors, modern logistics chains operate with remarkable efficiency. Today, it’s almost unimaginable that a store in in any European country would run out of bananas. “The fact that consumers don’t even think about how exotic fruits reach them is the best proof of how smoothly the whole process works,” says Girteka’s logistics expert Mantas Briedis.

Behind every banana, avocado, or box of blueberries is a sophisticated network of farmers, exporters, customs brokers, logistics planners, and drivers working in sync. Their coordination ensures that even fruits grown thousands of kilometers away arrive ripe, fresh, and ready to eat — right when we expect them to.

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Banana Ripening Facility Completed at London Gateway

 

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