Edeka Automates with OPM Technology

German Food retailer Edeka is launching a project to future-proof and sustainably modernize its logistics processes. At the end of December 2025, it signed a contract for the design and implementation of a new, highly automated central distribution centre in Melsungen, Germany. Starting in mid-2029, the facility will supply more than 500 stores with a dry goods assortment of up to 16,500 items. This makes Hessenring the fifth EDEKA region to rely on WITRON’s industry expertise. In addition, NETTO – a subsidiary – already operates WITRON solutions at several of its sites.

“Until now, the Hessenring region has relied exclusively on manual warehouse and picking processes”, explains Martin Steinmetz, Logistics Director at EDEKA Hessenring. “By leveraging innovative automated logistics technology, we will in future be able to supply our independent retailers more efficiently and cost-effectively – even as the variety of items continues to grow. At the same time, our employees throughout the entire supply chain will benefit from ergonomic and sustainable working processes.”

High-performance module mix

The 35,300 square metre facility, offering a total of 306,000 pallet, tray, and tote storage locations and equipped with 58 highly dynamic stacker cranes, is designed for a daily picking performance of 285,500 cases. Most of these cases are stacked fully automatically, error‑free, and store‑friendly onto pallets and roll containers by 18 COM machines. Small-volume fast- and slow-moving items are picked directly into the shipping tote at 10 workstations using the All-in-One (AIO) system. Bulky items are picked by logistics employees using pick-by-voice, supported by the semi-automated WITRON Car Picking System (CPS). Subsequent consolidation – and thus a high packing density on the load carriers – is achieved through the conveyor-based integration of all logistics areas within the material flow concept.

Half and quarter pallets are placed fully automatically onto pallets and roll containers by the WITRON Display Pallet Picking System (DPP). The dispatch process is optimized by a fully automated shipping buffer.

No more silos, but a true end-to-end approach

An intelligent IT platform ensures the seamless networking of all processes across the internal and external value added chain, providing high process flexibility in real time. The focus is on a holistic, end‑to‑end approach that encompasses all stakeholders within the supply chain – from supplier to end consumer – thereby eliminating isolated silos.

High in-house value-added share

Most of the mechanical, conveyor, racking, and mezzanine components are designed by WITRON and manufactured in-house at the company’s production facilities in Parkstein. The same applies to the IT, control, and AI tools used.

A partnership spanning decades

EDEKA and WITRON share a partnership that has grown over many decades. Automated solutions have already been successfully implemented in Hamm / Oberhausen (Rhine-Ruhr region), Landsberg (southern Bavaria region), Zarrentin / Neumünster (northern region), Berbersdorf / Marktredwitz (northern Bavariy, Saxony, Thuringia region), as well as in the NETTO distribution centres in Erharting and Henstedt.

Platform Play for Transport Digitalisation

New Alpega CEO Daniel Cohen has plans that will excite shippers, forwarders and carriers across the transportation space in Europe. He spoke to Paul Hamblin.

It is rare indeed to find a CEO willing to talk to an industry journalist while less than one month into a new and demanding role – that Cohen (pictured, below) was prepared to do so speaks volumes both for his willingness to engage and his confidence in the company’s ethos and people.

First, a recap. Alpega is the transportation software specialist founded in Belgium – and now with offices across Europe and the world – offering digital solutions across the spectrum to carriers, forwarders and shippers. Capabilities include Transport Execution, Transport Planning, Dock Scheduling, Freight Sourcing and a comprehensive Freight Exchange and Payments network. Particularly strong in Iberia, France and Central Europe, brands under the Alpega umbrella include the Teleroute, wtransnet and 123cargo freight exchanges. Over 80,000 carriers are signed to the powerful Alpega platform.

From point to platform

Now, the future, and Daniel Cohen’s mission for the business: he wants to exploit Alpega’s unique capabilities to develop as a unifying platform. He points out that the company has been highly successful in building best-in-class point solutions, but believes the next phase of value creation lies in bringing execution together on a single system.

What does ‘platform’ mean, though? “The freight industry doesn’t have a planning problem or a tendering problem or a liquidity problem – it has an end-to-end execution problem,” he says. “Too many systems optimise individual steps, but nobody owns what actually happens end-to-end. Our ambition is for Alpega to become the system where transport decisions are executed, verified, and trusted, rather than split across disconnected tools.”

A key motivation is ‘network effect’ created when both sides of the market interact at scale. “We already operate at scale on both the shipper and carrier sides,” Cohen explains. “What changes everything is when those two sides stop operating in parallel and start operating together. That interaction – at scale – is where efficiency, liquidity and reliability are created. Very few platforms in Europe are structurally able to do that. Alpega is.”

Of course, there is another word for the magic he describes: data.

“In every industry I’ve worked in, trust at scale is built the same way – through consistent behaviour, measured over time,” he says. “Freight is no different. The difference is that Alpega already sits on execution data across planning, spot, visibility, booking and settlement. That allows us to move trust away from opinion and toward signal, which is where real scale becomes possible.”

Competitive strengths

Of course, there are other very strong platforms out there in the transport space. What does he view as Alpega’s strengths to enable it to both compete with and outshine other platforms?

“Most platforms optimise either shippers or carriers,” he replies. “We optimise the relationship between them. That’s a structurally different position in the market, and it fundamentally changes how value is created.”

He continues: “Think about the strength of Alpega today. We have a substantial, pan-European, solid carrier network, with solid liquidity and very deep domain expertise – every single person I meet in the company has spent their life in the industry and has incredibly deep knowledge.”

What can Alpega do that its rivals envy and admire, I ask?

“For shippers, it’s about predictable access to capacity across Europe, even when markets are volatile,” he explains. “For carriers, it’s about consistent opportunity and better asset utilisation. When both happen on the same platform, friction drops out of the system for everyone involved.

“We’re providing solid value to each of the sides, but where Alpega can really shine is in connecting this bridge between the two sides of the transport coin. The constituent parts are spot-on – they just need to be arranged in the right way and brought to play in a market that is poised to come alive.”

Will there be more unified Alpega branding, perhaps in the form of consolidating the freight exchanges under one name?

“Every decision we take will be guided by the platform strategy,” he says. “Brand follows value. If consolidation improves execution for customers, we’ll do it. If it doesn’t, we won’t.”

As a leader, Daniel Cohen arrives in the transport industry with plaudits. “Energetic, passionate, direct, driven, transparent, inclusive. Tough, but challenging” are all words described to me by members of his team.

He deflects the praise quickly when I report this. “The real advantage we have is the people,” he counters. “This is a deeply experienced industry team with a strong sense of ownership. Strategy matters, platforms matter, but execution always comes down to people. That’s what will make the biggest difference here.”

Exciting times, then, for Alpega and for its customers. “Digitalisation in transport is no longer optional,” he concludes. “What is still optional is fragmentation. The next phase of the market is consolidation around platforms that actually execute. That’s the phase we’re entering now.”

Pharma Airfreight Cold-Chain Network Grows

DHL Group has announced major steps to strengthen its Life Sciences & Healthcare (LSH) logistics capabilities with an expanded dedicated Airfreight Cold Chain Network – a move designed to reshape how temperature-sensitive medicines, vaccines, pharmaceutical products and cell & gene therapies move across the world. The global network, another core element of DHL’s €2 billion strategic investment in DHL Health Logistics gives customers full end-to-end visibility for highly sensitive healthcare products and supports the evolving logistics requirements of the world’s largest healthcare and pharmaceutical companies.

“Life sciences and healthcare companies expect cold chain solutions that are reliable, compliant, and transparent from end to end — and those expectations are rising fast,” said Oscar de Bok, CEO of DHL Global Forwarding, Freight. “At the same time, they’re looking for ways to simplify supply chains and reduce costs. Our expanded network brings together DHL Aviation’s global air connectivity, our GDP-compliant station network, and our major investments in modern, temperature-controlled facilities. The result is a more resilient, more efficient logistics backbone for customers who depend on flawless quality to deliver critical therapies to patients.”

By reducing reliance on third-party carriers and commercial airlines, DHL improves product integrity and temperature control throughout the journey while increasing supply chain resilience amid geopolitical tensions, capacity shortages, and growing regulatory complexity. The expansion adds capacity for temperature-sensitive pharmaceutical and medical shipments and connects key markets through more than 30 GDP-compliant aviation hubs and gateways.

The network will first connect major DHL hubs, including Brussels (BRU) – Cincinnati (CVG), with additional routes in Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Latin America to follow. The BRU-CVG corridor connects the U.S. Midwest, home to leading pharma companies, directly to one of Europe’s most advanced life sciences ecosystems. By avoiding coastal congestion, the lane provides a seamless, temperature-controlled pathway for high-value biologics and time-critical cell and gene therapies. At the Brussels end, the route is supported by 45,000 square metres of pharma-only zones at BRUcargo, delivering clinical-grade integrity end to end. Together, this infrastructure establishes a resilient connection between two of the world’s most important healthcare markets.

Countries prioritized for further expansion of the Airfreight Cold Chain Network include India, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Brazil, the United States, Germany, and Ireland. These routes are designed to meet strict regulatory requirements and maintain product quality throughout the supply chain.

The expanded network supports DHL’s mission to strengthen global health logistics and meet rising demand for fast, reliable, temperature-controlled transport of pharmaceutical products and medical supplies. Patient safety remains central to the service. Combined with significant investments in temperature-controlled infrastructure, the network reduces reliance on heavy, costly packaging and refrigerated air freight containers, offering an economical service focused on quality and minimizing temperature excursions.

To support the expanded network, DHL has introduced a dedicated Boeing 777 freighter operating between Brussels and Cincinnati. The aircraft, which features the new ‘DHL Health Logistics’ livery, serves as a visible marker of the company’s strategic focus on healthcare logistics. More importantly, its dedicated routing provides consistent, controllable capacity on one of the most critical pharma lanes, reinforcing the reliability and temperature management standards required for sensitive shipments. While the branding highlights the sector’s importance, the aircraft’s operational role strengthens the backbone of DHL’s growing health logistics network.

RFID Tag Inspector Application Launched

A global supplier of RFID solutions and data capture has announced the development and launch of ‘Tag Inspector’, the first open application specifically designed for smartphones with integrated RFID readers, targeted at technical validation and R&D. This new tool marks a qualitative leap in the way RFID data is read, managed and interpreted in a fast, intuitive and efficient way, directly from the mobile device.

Clustag will officially present ‘Tag Inspector’ at EuroShop Düsseldorf, at Zebra Technologies’ stand. In an edition marked by the strong presence of RAIN RFID, the company will demonstrate how this technology, already well established in retail, allows for optimised efficiency and automation of validation and inventory processes in real-world environments.

With this launch, Clustag expands its RAIN solutions ecosystem with an application for R&D, IT and test lab departments, as well as professionals who need to conduct rapid validations, comparative tag analyses or technical demonstrations in different environments.

‘Tag Inspector’ overcomes the usual limitations of native applications for these devices thanks to a modern, clear and process-oriented interface, which makes reading, validation and identification tasks simple and accessible.

The launch of ‘Tag Inspector’ forms part of a global trend highlighted by the RAIN Alliance, which describes the integration of RAIN RFID readers into smartphones as a ‘new wave of innovation’, driven by manufacturers such as Qualcomm and Impinj. The organisation is accelerating this technology by promoting ecosystem meetings in working groups focused on ensuring interoperability through standardisation.

In this context, Clustag maintains ongoing contact with Zebra Technologies, a manufacturer that integrates RFID readers into industrial smartphones. Initially, ‘Tag Inspector’ is available for their EM45-RFID and TC53e-RFID models, with plans to expand to other additional models. Although these devices do not yet achieve all the capabilities of a traditional RFID PDA, their design and ongoing advances in mobile reading are accelerating their adoption in technical environments.

The goal of this collaboration between Clustag and Zebra is to continue exploring new applications, understand the evolution of these devices and progressively optimise ‘Tag Inspector’ according to real market needs. In this context, there is consideration for the application to also work on other industrial devices without an integrated RFID reader, increasing its versatility and enabling flexible technology adoption without replacing current equipment.

Clint Tenill, Vice President of Product Innovation at Clustag NA, highlights the impact this transformation will have on the sector, noting that the adoption of this technology is accelerating in North America. “Driven by initiatives such as the RAIN Alliance, which is standardising its integration into mobile devices, ‘Tag Inspector’ offers retailers an agile tool to validate tags, compare suppliers and make decisions based on real data, directly from a smartphone. This reduces friction and speeds up RFID integration in stores and logistics centres.”

Multiple features in an intuitive yet specialised tool

‘Tag Inspector’ stands out for being an open application compatible with a variety of RFID tags from multiple manufacturers. Its ability to scan heterogeneous tags allows retailers to identify which models each uses, analyse their behaviour and determine what improvements they may need. This is especially useful in evaluation, benchmarking and supplier selection processes.

These features allow tags to be tested in different environments and reading points, observe variations in frequency, power and sensitivity, or compare performance between old and new models. In this way, suppliers can be objectively assessed, and their entire RAIN RFID ecosystem optimised in telecommunications, R&D or technical validation contexts.

Our goal with ‘Tag Inspector’ was to put the user experience at the centre and develop a tool that is intuitive but highly specialised, aimed at technical and innovation teams that require precision, speed and constant evolution in their RFID tests and deployments,

says Toni Tortosa, project lead in the Clustag IT team.

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