Poland–UK Logistics Shows Stable Return Ratios

Cross-border parcel flows from Poland to the United Kingdom show that return rates remain operationally manageable, reaching an average of 2.8% across analysed shipments in 2025. The analysis is based on shipment and return data from 502 exporters, structured using HS (Harmonized System) codes assigned at customs clearance. This allows for detailed tracking of product flows, return frequency and category-level performance across the Poland–UK corridor. What are the biggest logistical challenges in the area of returns?

From a logistics perspective, the data indicates that cross-border shipping to the UK is no longer treated as an unstable or experimental route. Instead, it operates as a predictable flow with measurable return ratios and defined cost structures.

Shipment structure reflects diversified parcel flows

The structure of shipments is distributed across multiple product categories:

Home & Interior – 24.10%
Beauty – 15.14%
Garden – 12.52%
Supplements & Vitamins – 7.82%
Clothing – 5.85%
Toys & Sports – 5.54%
Footwear – 5.09%

The distribution shows that parcel flows are not concentrated in high-return segments such as fashion. A significant share comes from categories typically associated with lower reverse logistics pressure and more predictable fulfilment processes.

Returns are not a barrier to entering the UK market

“There is still a persistent myth surrounding sales to the UK, particularly in the fashion segment, that return risk is high. Our data shows something different. Even in clothing and footwear, we are not talking about levels that could destabilise a business. It is not a barrier to entry. It is a parameter of the category that should be built into the business model.” says Paweł Zakielarz, CEO of Global24 & Shopreturns.
“Even in clothing and footwear we are not seeing levels that could destabilise a business. Returns are not a barrier to entry, they are simply a parameter of the category that should be incorporated into the business model.”

Zakielarz notes that the perception of the UK market has evolved in recent years:

“After Brexit, many sellers paused expansion plans. Today we see a clear shift. Cross-border has become part of long-term international strategy rather than a test market. The relatively low return rate suggests that sellers increasingly understand both customs requirements and the expectations of British consumers.”

Marketplace ecosystems raise the bar

International expansion increasingly takes place within marketplace ecosystems, where return rates influence seller performance indicators. In such environments, returns are not only a logistics cost but also a factor affecting offer visibility and sales performance. Lower return levels may indicate better product-market alignment and more accurate product communication.

Industry observers note that cross-border expansion is no longer limited to large enterprises. Specialised brands in sectors such as home, beauty and supplements are increasingly building international presence through selected marketplaces.

What are the biggest logistical challenges in the area of returns?

Returns in cross-border logistics are among the most operationally complex processes in the entire supply chain. They require coordination of multiple elements simultaneously – from organising reverse transport and handling customs clearance, to managing costs and delivery times, as well as efficient processing of returned goods in warehouses. An additional challenge is the unpredictability of volumes and regulatory differences between markets, which can impact both the time and cost of return handling. As a result, effective reverse logistics management is no longer just an operational issue, but a key factor influencing the profitability of international sales.

In the traditional returns model, the process remains costly, time-consuming, and difficult to control. Returns are often handled via expensive international shipments paid for by the customer, without full tracking capabilities or real-time status verification. There is also a lack of effective quantity and quality control mechanisms, which complicates further inventory management. An additional challenge is the inability to meet the requirements of marketplaces such as Amazon, Zalando, or eBay, where return handling standards are becoming increasingly stringent. Moreover, each individual return generates high CO₂ emissions due to the need for international transportation.

Shein Launches Major Logistics Centre in Poland

“The Shopreturns model changes this perspective by shifting return handling to the local level. Returns are processed by local couriers, with full tracking and scanning within 24 hours, significantly reducing operational time. Thanks to local return centres, costs are lower and the process becomes more predictable. Each return can undergo quantity and quality control, supported by photo documentation, enabling faster decision-making and improved process control. The solution has been designed in line with the requirements of major marketplaces, facilitating international sales. At the same time, localising returns reduces the need for long-distance transport, resulting in a significant reduction in CO₂ emissions,” adds Zakielarz.

From a logistics industry perspective, the growing importance of returns management indicates a clear shift in the role of operators within the supply chain. Reverse logistics is no longer a supplementary service but is becoming an integral element of cross-border process design – on par with first-mile delivery. Companies that are able to optimise return handling at the local level gain not only a cost advantage, but also greater operational control and compliance with marketplace requirements. In practice, this means that the efficiency of returns logistics is increasingly determining the scalability of the entire international sales model.

Wheels for Steel

Clark Materials Handling’s electric forklifts help ensure emission-free logistics at a door and gate factory in Germany.

In Großzöberitz, Saxony-Anhalt, door and gate manufacturer Teckentrup produces steel doors and frames on one of Europe’s longest production lines. Around 1,500 to 2,000 doors roll off the production line every week. This requires a logistical masterpiece every single day. A total of 30 Clark electric forklifts, which prove their worth in all areas of the factory, make a significant contribution to this. The Clark fleet is a prime example of how emission-free, low-maintenance handling can be successfully implemented in industrial door production.

Teckentrup GmbH & Co. KG, headquartered in Westphalia and with production facilities in Saxony-Anhalt, is one of the largest manufacturers of doors and gates in Europe. As an expert in customised door and gate solutions, Teckentrup offers high-quality, customer-focused products in the home (garage doors), professional (functional doors) and industrial (industrial doors) sectors. The company works with its partners to develop tailor-made solutions and enjoys both national and international success.

Industrial customers

Teckentrup currently has a high vertical range of manufacture of 90 per cent. With around 900 employees and a network of European subsidiaries and partners, the company has extensive market knowledge and develops doors that are precisely tailored to country-specific requirements. The focus is on the development and production of high-quality industrial doors and functional sheet steel doors, which are specially manufactured for use in fire, sound, burglary and smoke protection. Requirements have increased significantly in recent years due to stricter regulations and an increased need for security.

“As a medium-sized, owner-managed company, we are flexible, provide individual customer service and meet high requirements,” explains Peter Handrich, Head of Supply Chain Management at Teckentrup in Großzöberitz. “We are the market leader in terms of approval depth and technical specifications, especially when it comes to safety issues such as fire protection or special constructions.”

Digitalisation plays an important role in accelerating and streamlining work processes. “Teckentrup is driving forward digital solutions in all areas of the company, with a focus on sales and production,” explains Handrich. “Our online configurator TEO, for example, allows doors and gates to be configured quickly and in a user-friendly manner in accordance with standards, and construction projects to be planned efficiently,” he adds. “A new import function makes it possible to read, analyse and process service specifications at the touch of a button.”

High demands on functional doors

In Zörbig Teckentrup operates a factory built in 1990 and continuously modernised and expanded to produce steel doors – in particular fire doors, tubular frame doors, roller shutters and frames. “Here, industrial doors are manufactured largely automatically in two shifts,” explains Handrich. “Due to rising production figures of around 100,000 doors and 5,000 roller shutters per year, the capacity in the powder coating area at the Großzöberitz plant was expanded in 2023 with a new system and the manufacturing processes were restructured.”

Teckentrup is currently planning two new production lines for frames and a new mat hall for the manufacture of fire doors. Sustainability plays a major role: the roof of the production hall in Großzöberitz is equipped with a PV system with a total capacity of 1000 kWp for generating the company’s own electricity. When the decision was made to purchase new industrial trucks, it was clear that only environmentally friendly electric forklifts would be considered.

Sustainability and safety in the truck fleet

“We tested several competing vehicles, but I liked Clark’s ‘green’ one best and it won us over – not because of the colour,” laughs Handrich, “but because of its good performance data and high user-friendliness.” The close cooperation with Clark’s partner P&H Gabelstapler und Baumaschinen was also a decisive factor. “P&H had already provided us with good advice and support with the Clark gas forklifts,” says Handrich. Marcel Krämer, Head of Maintenance, can only agree: “The Clark forklifts and P&H have become indispensable in our factory.”

Currently, 30 Clark electric forklifts are in use in Großzöberitz – including 27 GEX 20-30 electric forklifts with a load capacity of 2 and 3 tonnes and one GEX 50 electric forklift with a load capacity of 5 tonnes and a special triplex mast with a lifting height of 8.50 metres. The vehicle is mainly used for maintenance work, for example on the PV system. Two new Clark SE20 (48 volt) and SE30 (80 volt) electric forklifts were recently purchased. With a load capacity of 2 and 3 tonnes, these forklifts offer the perfect combination of ergonomics, safety and high handling performance. The compact forklifts are very manoeuvrable and ideal for indoor and outdoor use. With a steering angle of 101° (zero steer turn axle), they prove particularly useful in narrow aisles or space-critical work areas, as they can turn almost on the spot.

Occupational health and safety are high priorities at Teckentrup. Management also listens to its employees. “Our forklift drivers should feel comfortable on their forklifts, because good ergonomics increase productivity,” says Peter Handrich. It was therefore important that the electric forklifts had an ergonomic driver’s seat and intuitive controls. Restraint systems from IWS provide additional safety. The IWS ‘Pilot Protector’ restraint system consists of gas-pressure-sprung swing doors that protect the driver in the event of the vehicle tipping over sideways.

Lead-acid instead of lithium-ion batteries

All Clark electric forklifts are equipped with lead-acid batteries. Teckentrup made a conscious decision against lithium-ion technology. “The use of Li-ion batteries is not cost-effective in our factory,” explains Krämer. “We have the time to charge batteries because our logistics operate on a single shift basis.” The site uses high-frequency charging technology so that vehicles are quickly ready for use when needed. “We have the space for the charging infrastructure. Lead-acid batteries have a long service life – often well over ten years – even with around 1,000 operating hours per year in single-shift operation,” adds Krämer.

Tailored to the task

Clark forklifts are used in all areas of the plant, from goods receipt and dispatch to truck loading and unloading. They distribute goods within the plant and supply the production lines with materials. Raw materials are delivered on coils or pallets and transported to the relevant consumption points. Larger coils are moved by crane; smaller coils and palletised goods are transported to their destination by forklift. The hydraulic fork adjustment ensures that the forks of the forklift can be adjusted from pallet to coil transport.

The material for current production is kept ready to hand at the workstations. Clark forklifts also ensure that supplies are replenished. The lead time from ordering a door solution to delivery is approximately 4-5 weeks for standard solutions. The finished doors are stored in a cantilever trolley in the warehouse or transported by forklift to the shipping department, where they are packaged. The forklifts responsible for picking the goods are equipped with a tablet so that picking can be carried out paperless via the merchandise management system.

“Our goal at our plant in Großzöberitz is to make industrial door and gate production as efficient and sustainable as possible – from resource-saving production and in-house power generation to emission-free and smooth logistics processes. Our partner Clark also makes an important contribution to this,” concludes Handrich.

Another Full-range Distribution Centre in Sweden

In mid-December 2025, Swedish food retailer Axfood and the Witron Group signed a project agreement as well as the contract for remote and ‘OnSite’ services, thereby jointly initiating the realization of another full-range logistics centre. A 90,000 square metre highly-automated facility will be built in Kungsbacka (near Gothenburg) in southern Sweden, supplying more than 400 stores with different dry, fresh, and frozen items. On peak days, more than 560,000 cases will be picked in a store-friendly manner using fully or semi-automated processes. The new project underscores the expansion of the strategic partnership between the two companies, which have already very successfully put one of the world’s most efficient omnichannel distribution centres into operation in Bålsta (near Stockholm).

“I am glad that we now have signed an agreement with Witron for automation in the logistics centre that we will establish. This solution will give us a more flexible, efficient and sustainable logistics chain for product supply to our stores in the southern parts of Sweden, thereby strengthening the entire Axfood family’s competitiveness,” comments Simone Margulies, President and CEO of Axfood.

Logical next step

“It feels very good to have the agreement in place for this strategically important automation solution. With the experience we have built together with Witron in Bålsta, we know that this technology will give us the right conditions going forward, and as a natural step, we feel confident in continuing this journey also in southern Sweden. This investment is fundamental in strengthening Dagab’s and Axfood’s future logistics structure, and for continuing to deliver on our ambition of market-leading efficiency,” says Hans Bax, Managing Director of Dagab.

High level of automation across all temperature zones

In Kungsbacka, products will be stored and picked across three temperature zones: ambient goods (+18 °C), fresh goods (+2 °C), and frozen items (-26 °C). As in Bålsta, the solution relies on standardized Witron logistics modules, including Order Picking Machinery (OPM with a total of 37 COMs), All-in-One (AIO), the Car Picking System (CPS), and a fully automated shipping buffer. Within this shipping buffer, store-friendly picked and consolidated order pallets are buffered and provided just-in-time on heavy-duty lanes, sequenced by delivery route for efficient truck loading. In addition, the Goods-to-Person (GTP) solution enables ergonomic semi-automated picking operations in the frozen food area.

High-performance warehouse management system

The overall material flow includes more than 500,000 storage locations for wooden and plastic pallets, roll containers, totes, and refrigerated containers, 111 stacker cranes, as well as 16+ kilometers of conveyor technology. All processes are controlled by a multifunctional warehouse management system with open interfaces from the WMS to the customer’s supplier systems, route scheduling systems, and sales systems. This enables a high level of end-to-end optimization across Axfood’s entire internal and external supply chain. A Witron OnSite service team of more than 60 employees ensures consistently high system availability in multi-shift operation around the clock – 365 days a year.

Successful omnichannel project

Both companies can reflect positively on a jointly and successfully implemented project. Since early 2025, following a phased ramp-up, one of the most innovative logistics centres in the retail industry has been operating at full capacity in Bålsta, around 40 kilometers northwest of Stockholm. Axfood and Witron designed and realized a cutting-edge omnichannel distribution centre that supplies stores as well as end customers via click + collect and home delivery. The highly automated system handles a product range of 22,000+ dry, fresh, and frozen items.

High-precision RFID Tunnels in DC

In the highly competitive U.S. fashion market, logistics accuracy plays a critical role in protecting margins and meeting strict retail compliance requirements. Perry Ellis International, one of North America’s leading fashion groups, has strengthened its B2B outbound operations by deploying an automated post‑picking validation system based on RAIN RFID tunnels at its distribution centre in the Atlanta area.

The project targets one of the most sensitive points in fashion logistics: final order validation after picking and just before shipment to wholesale customers and retail networks. While picking operations were already supported by pick‑to‑light systems, final verification still relied heavily on manual checks, making it difficult to detect discrepancies before shipments left the facility.

In the U.S. fashion industry, these discrepancies carry a direct financial impact. Chargebacks caused by missing or excess items are among the most common penalties imposed by retailers, often reaching up to 20% of the invoice value and resulting in losses that can amount to tens of thousands of dollars per shipment.

To eliminate this risk, Perry Ellis implemented high-density RFID tunnels fully integrated into its existing conveyor lines. The solution automatically validates the contents of each open box after picking, comparing in real time the items detected by RFID with the expected order data.

The system combines Clustag MOT Station RFID tunnels, capable of processing up to 1,000 boxes per hour and reading up to 600 items per box, with Cognex barcode readers for box identification. Interroll automated rejection lines that divert non compliant shipments without interrupting operational flow.

The entire process is orchestrated by Zentup, Clustag’s middleware platform, fully integrated with Perry Ellis’ Manhattan WMS, ensuring real time EPC level validation and allowing only compliant orders to proceed to shipping. The entire process is orchestrated by Zentup, Clustag’s middleware platform, fully integrated with Perry Ellis’ Manhattan WMS, ensuring real‑time EPC‑level validation and allowing only compliant orders to proceed to shipping.

One of the challenges was deploying the RFID solution in a live production environment under tight timelines and complex installation conditions, including work on mezzanines over 12 meters high. Despite these constraints, the RAIN system was implemented without interrupting daily operations or reducing throughput.

The results were immediate. Since go‑live, Perry Ellis has achieved a 17% reduction in discrepancies detected after the RFID tunnels, along with a significant decrease in non‑compliant shipments reaching B2B customers. This has translated into substantial savings in chargeback penalties and improved product availability at stores, ensuring the correct sizes, colours, and styles arrive at the point of sale.

“This project shows how RFID technology can transform fashion intralogistics from day one,” says Jorge Robledillo, Director of Clustag North America. “Strong collaboration between teams was essential to delivering measurable results in a highly demanding operational environment.”

According to Tom Seow, VP of Distribution Engineering at Perry Ellis, “the RFID tunnel solutions, integrated with Zentup, allow us to detect errors before they reach the store and give us a clear competitive advantage. We will continue investing in these systems for future projects.”

With this deployment, Perry Ellis reinforces its intralogistics digitalization strategy and demonstrates how automated post‑picking validation with RFID tunnels has become a key tool for reducing financial risk, improving operational efficiency, and meeting the high standards of U.S. retail operations.

This success story will be featured by Clustag at MODEX 2026, where the company will exhibit from April 13 to 16 in Atlanta (Booth B17332). The event will serve as a platform to discuss with U.S. customers and partners how RAIN RFID solutions can be successfully integrated into highly automated intralogistics environments and how these projects are setting a new benchmark for B2B fashion distribution in North America.

AMR/AGV Obstacle Avoidance Software

Autonomous navigation and fleet management supplier BlueBotics has launched ‘SmartPass’, a new efficiency-driving innovation within its ANT software suite.

Available for ‘ANT driven’ AGVs and AMRs, SmartPass is a robust, safe, and highly configurable technology that meets the core efficiency goal of obstacle avoidance without the drawbacks of traditional AMRs. SmartPass suits all types of automated vehicles and industrial sites.

No matter how clean a site, and how well trained its staff, the paths of mobile robots sometimes become blocked… AGVs typically manage this situation by sending an alarm to an operator, while AMRs take any route possible, without limitation. The first can lead to transport delays, the second to traffic deadlocks. SmartPass effectively bridges the gap between the two.

commented BlueBotics’ CEO, Dr. Nicola Tomatis.

Bridging the gap between AGVs & AMRs

SmartPass enables automated vehicles to follow virtual paths most of the time — for efficient, robust, and repeatable operation — while performing pragmatic obstacle avoidance maneuvers when blockages are detected.

“Rather than layering basic traffic management over obstacle avoidance functionality — which AMR producers have attempted with limited results — SmartPass does the opposite,” Tomatis explained. “It adds smart, configurable obstacle avoidance to ANT navigation’s default ‘virtual path follower’ mode. This ensures the powerful traffic management features of our ANT server fleet manager are also applied to SmartPass maneuvers.”

Three key SmartPass benefits

ANT’s SmartPass function offers three key benefits that together are unique in the mobile robot industry:

  1. Efficiency-focused movement
    • Vehicles using SmartPass take the shortest route around an obstacle — within pre-configured limits — before returning immediately to their virtual path.
    • SmartPass-enabled vehicles also move faster than traditional AMRs. Travelling at optimal speeds and with optimal acceleration, they follow virtual paths and respect clear traffic rules most of the time, switching to slower, more reactive speeds only when needed.
    • Vehicle actions like moving forks and communicating with equipment take place during SmartPass maneuvers, saving time versus the more common sequential approach.
    • SmartPass maneuvers are blocked near pick/drop points to guarantee precision.
  2. Minimizes deadlocks
    • By managing the movements of vehicles within the ANT server’s existing traffic management framework, SmartPass guarantees that vehicles only avoid obstacles when there is no risk of blocking another robot, minimizing the chance of deadlocks.
    • Vehicles only move around objects and never around other vehicles, a further cause of deadlocks.
  3. Fully configurable
    • SmartPass can be configured to suit every user’s site and operational needs. Customers can define, for example, the maximum distance a vehicle is allowed to travel from its virtual path; the areas (and even individual routes) of a site where SmartPass cannot be used; and vehicle-specific parameters such as the exact distance to stop before an obstacle.

“SmartPass doesn’t allow robots to roam freely, and it is built from the ground up on ANT server’s powerful traffic management, virtually eliminating the chance of deadlocks,” Tomatis added. “We are confident this safe, prudent approach best meets the needs of industrial customers looking to deploy AGVs and AMRs in what are often high-traffic locations.”

SmartPass is available now for vehicle makers, system integrators, and end users deploying ‘ANT driven’ AGVs/AMRs managed by BlueBotics’ ANT server fleet manager.

A Lick of Paint for Warehouses

Scott Saunders (pictured, below), Technical Manager at Watco UK, shares his expert advice on preventative maintenance, floor care, warehouse floor paint and operational best practice to help logistics and distribution centres maintain a strong footing throughout 2026 and beyond.

What advice would you give to facilities managers who want to take a more proactive approach to maintenance and repairs this year?

“The key is to not wait for minor issues to become major problems. Seasonal changes, particularly the colder, wetter weather in winter, often leads to damage and hazards. Scheduled inspections and checklists for floors, steps and drainage points can prevent costly accidents and disruption.

“Using the right materials from the outset also makes a huge difference. Durable industrial floor coatings, e.g. Watco’s ‘Epoxy Gloss Coat’ help protect high-traffic areas, while anti slip coatings such as our ‘Safety Coat’ can be applied to the floor around entrances, ramps and wash-down zones to reduce slip risk from surface water. For small areas of surface damage, fast-setting repair solutions allow teams to carry out repairs quickly and get areas back into use with minimal downtime.”

How should warehouse layouts be reviewed to improve safety and flow efficiency? Is zoning essential?

“Warehouse layouts should be reviewed regularly, especially when operations change or new equipment is introduced. Many sites evolve organically over time, which can create pressure points where pedestrians, forklifts and automated vehicles meet. These areas not only slow operations down but also increase the risk of collision accidents.

Factory background with concrete floor, night scene.

“I do believe that zoning is essential for safe, smooth-running facilities today. Introducing clear pedestrian paths, and categorising facility areas based on usage e.g. parking bays and storage areas helps to ensure clear boundaries and safer behaviour.

“We offer both paint and tapes for teams to identify whether they want to line mark a boundary on the floor, or paint the whole section in a designated colour for illustrating zones. Watco’s ‘Epoxicote High Build’ and ‘Safety Tapes’ are ideal for defining zones quickly and clearly as they can be applied with minimal operational disruption. Observing how people and vehicles actually move through the warehouse is also important; layouts should reflect real-world use, not just plans on paper.”

How can health & safety costs in warehousing be monitored and evaluated?

“Many operators focus on direct costs such as PPE or training, but the indirect costs can be far greater. Lost time, damaged goods, insurance claims and reputational impact all add up quickly. Tracking near-misses, minor injuries and urgent repair requests provides valuable insight into underlying issues and helps prioritise investment.

“For example, repeated floor repairs in the same location often indicate that a more permanent solution is needed. Logging defects, repairs and associated downtime allows operators to identify trends, justify preventative spend and, over time, reduce both maintenance demands and overall health and safety costs.”

How do you recommend FMs get on top of flooring inspections and repairs?

“The most effective way to get on top of flooring inspections and repairs is to build them into everyday routines. Assigning responsibility for inspections e.g. a checklist that is tackled by a rota, ensures issues are spotted consistently, not just when problems become obvious.

“Inspections should focus on high-traffic routes, loading bays and areas exposed to moisture or chemicals, with findings logged so recurring issues can be tracked and prioritised. Smaller areas of surface damage such as hairline cracks, loose edges or shallow holes should be addressed quickly, before they develop into larger, more disruptive repairs.

“Planning for frequent, small-scale repairs also makes a difference. Using fast-curing repair materials allows work to be carried out in live environments with minimal disruption, which removes one of the main barriers to acting early.”

Warehouse floor paint

We talk a lot about warehouse automation, but many distribution centres are still untidy and cluttered. How can that be avoided?

“Automation doesn’t remove the need for good housekeeping – in fact, it makes it even more critical. Automated systems rely on clear routes, smooth floor conditions, and well-defined zones. Cluttered floors, damaged markings or poorly stored pallets can quickly undermine the benefits of automation.

“Avoiding this comes down to culture and clarity. Visual management, such as clear line markings and signage reinforces expectations. Temporary overflow should not become permanent, and regular audits help maintain standards. When staff understand the ‘why’ behind keeping areas clear, compliance improves and automated systems can deliver maximum value.”

How much downtime is typically involved in line marking, re-painting, matting, and taping work in warehouses?

“Downtime is often the biggest concern, but modern materials and methods have reduced disruption dramatically. Many line marking paints and floor coatings are fast-curing and can withstand traffic within two hours. Work can also be phased or carried out in quieter shifts to minimise operational impact.

“Similarly, high-quality matting and surface treatments can be installed quickly, providing immediate safety and efficiency benefits. The short-term inconvenience is minor compared to the long-term gains: reduced accidents, fewer urgent repairs, and a more productive warehouse.”

Supply Chain Solutions to the UK Defence Sector

Amentum, a global leader in advanced engineering and innovative technology solutions, GXO Logistics, Inc., the world’s largest pure-play contract logistics provider, Accenture, a leading global solutions and services company, and A.P.Moller – Maersk, the world’s largest integrated supply chain provider, have today announced a new alliance, Torus Defence Supply Chain, to help strengthen the future of the UK defence sector.

Torus will provide resilient, agile and integrated defence supply chain solutions, helping the UK defence sector adapt to the evolving threat landscape and build the agile capacity required to enhance sovereign capability.

Designed to help address the UK Government policy shift to readiness, visibility and data exploitation, Torus draws on alliance members’ proven capabilities and mission-critical expertise in military domain, procurement and supply chain. The alliance is underpinned by a shared commitment of collaboration, compliance and continuous improvement to solve complex challenges in the UK defence market.

Amentum will provide overall integration and programme management based on more than 60 years of support to UK defence operations, procurement, logistics support, programme/project delivery and transformation. Its global expertise, built over decades of defence, aerospace and national security experience in the USA and UK, ensures interoperability with allied sustainment systems and proven global buying power. Last September, Amentum announced plans to add another 3,000 people to its current UK workforce of more than 6,000 over the next four years.

• GXO will develop and operate innovative logistics solutions, leveraging its more than two decades of experience partnering with leading aerospace and defence organisations. With A&D operations spanning more than 30 global sites, GXO recently bolstered its UK defence capabilities through the acquisition of Wincanton, a longstanding trusted partner to the UK defence and industrial sector. GXO currently employs more than 60,000 team members across 450 sites in the UK and is a Gold Award level member of the UK’s Defence Employer recognition scheme for its work with the Armed Forces.

Accenture will lead digital reinvention with a core role to deliver digital enablement and integrated decision support capability. Accenture’s deep experience of defence logistics information systems and digital transformation will enable real-time, single-version-of-the-truth visibility and smarter, data and AI-powered decision making that balance readiness, cost and resilience.

Maersk will provide global integrated movement solutions utilising its extensive network across multiple modes to enable global reach ensuring compliance with stringent security standards for defence and government cargo whilst ensuring the scale of its owned assets provide agility and resilience to allow defence to plan and react to a changing need.

Loren Jones, Amentum Senior Vice President, said: “Our combined global reach and military domain experience, specifically Amentum’s proven success in deployed logistics and integrating complex systems for the U.S. Government, perfectly aligns with the UK Defence sector’s requirement for future operational resilience and it’s imperative to move beyond systems optimised for just-in-time to ones of assured readiness and global reach.” 

Gavin Williams, Managing Director, GXO UK & Ireland, said: “The defence sector is tasked with responding to dynamic global challenges which has created substantial demands on its supply chains. GXO’s proven capability in the global defence sector optimises efficiency and builds resilience in complex supply chains, providing leading defence organisations with the assurance they will have the adaptive capacity required to deliver with confidence.”

Mark Smith, EMEA Defence Lead at Accenture, said: “This alliance brings together unmatched expertise in logistics systems and data-driven digital transformation – enabling scalable, interoperable solutions that enhance mission readiness. Accenture’s deep defence logistics knowledge and cutting-edge digital capabilities, refined through working with over 20 NATO countries, can help ensure operational continuity and resilience in complex global environments.”

Beyond focusing on supporting UK sovereign mission readiness, the alliance is committed to investing in UK infrastructure, contributing to economic growth and fostering digital skills in local communities.

New Series of Reach Trucks

A new series of trucks from Linde Material Handling (MH) will be unveiled at LogiMAT 2026 in Stuttgart. The Linde Ri14 to Ri18 models are engineered for standard applications with low- to medium-intensity use. Offering a combination of affordability, focused performance, ergonomic benefits, and extensive safety features, these reach trucks are ideally suited for use in distribution centers and retail environments, as well as in the food, automotive and chemical industries. Their compact design with an integrated lithium-ion battery makes them ideal for operation in narrow aisles.

Optional upgrades, including ‘PowerDrive’ and ‘PowerLift’, are available to enhance travel and lift speeds, resulting in improved customer throughput. Furthermore, the vehicles are equipped with a variety of safety features. These include, among others, the standard all-wheel braking system and a shoulder guard protection. The driver’s workstation offers extensive comfort with complete decoupling from the chassis, excellent all-round visibility, additional space and versatile adjustability. Digital interfaces allow the reach trucks to be seamlessly integrated into operational IT systems, and the modular design facilitates the creation of customized solutions.

“The new reach trucks, which have a load capacity ranging from 1.4 to 1.8 tons, augment Linde MH’s existing portfolio. They are intended for the growing number of companies seeking compact, agile vehicles for single- and two-shift operations. Such trucks should be economical to purchase, high-quality, powerful, safe and comfortable for operators,” explains Alexander Schmidt, Senior Product Manager at Linde MH. “The Linde Ri reach trucks combine all these attributes, making them an excellent option for replenishment operations within the warehouse – that is, for transporting goods throughout the warehouse and performing storage and retrieval operations in block or rack systems.”

Optimized for typical warehouse applications

With a total length of 1,215 millimeters (l2 dimension), a turning radius of 2,709 millimeters (AST), and lifting heights of up to 11 meters, Linde Ri reach trucks optimize storage capacity utilization. They can be equipped with the optional PowerDrive and PowerLift functions to increase performance in goods handling. These options increase travel speed by 18 percent and lifting speed by 16 percent setting new performance benchmarks for this class of standard trucks. Two mast series ensure high residual load capacities. Mast functions are controlled ergonomically and with millimeter precision via the Linde Load Control system. Drivers can quickly and easily control the direction of travel and speed with the Linde dual pedal control. A lithium-ion spare battery is available for multi-shift operation to ensure continuous vehicle availability.

Comprehensive safety package

The comprehensive safety package focuses on protecting the driver, goods and infrastructure. An important competitive advantage is the standard hydraulic load wheel brakes, which provide short braking distances regardless of the load’s weight or the mast’s position, giving the driver maximum control over the vehicle. Another standard feature is the Linde Curve Assist. This system automatically adjusts the driving speed around curves based on the steering angle, thus increasing the vehicle’s stability. The elevated seat position improves the driver’s visibility of the load and surroundings. Optional features such as a reinforced glass roof, shoulder guard protection, and innovative assistance systems like the Linde Safety Guard, which warns of potential collisions, and the Rack Protection Sensor, which prevents collision damage to racks, provide additional protection.

Ergonomic benefits prevent fatigue

The driver’s workstation is fully decoupled from the chassis, effectively absorbing shocks and vibrations, which helps prevent premature fatigue. Together with the suspension-mounted driver’s seat, the workstation effectively absorbs shocks and vibrations experienced by the driver. Components such as the steering wheel, seat, and optional height-adjustable pedal plate can be adjusted individually to suit the driver and ensure a relaxed working posture. The low, wide entry with a non-slip surface makes it easier for operators to safely and frequently enter and exit the truck during daily warehouse operations. Numerous compartments provide ample storage space.

Reliable service

The robust design of the reach trucks, along with maintenance-free components such as the induction-hardened mast guide rails, ensure high availability and durability while reducing operating costs. All service-relevant components are easily accessible, which shortens maintenance times. Thanks to modern electronic architecture, software updates and new vehicle functions can be installed remotely over the air. The standard 14.3 kWh integrated lithium-ion battery is particularly energy-efficient and can be replaced with a more powerful 21.4 kWh battery if performance requirements increase.

Strait of Hormuz and the Supply Chain

Tensions around the Strait of Hormuz are forcing supply chain leaders to ask a question most would rather not face: if this corridor closes, how would we actually respond?

Jonathan Barrett (pictured, below), CEO, Kallikor, provided this comment:

“The challenge is that these plans often rely on assumed responses rather than tested outcomes. In practice, it can be difficult for organisations to see how different decisions – rerouting shipments, adjusting sourcing, reallocating inventory or changing service commitments – will actually behave across the entire supply chain once disruption begins.

“We’ve seen this before through the Suez Canal obstruction in 2021 and the Red Sea shipping disruption in 2023–2024, when pressure in one part of the global trading system forced companies to make rapid operational choices with limited visibility into the wider consequences.

“Many companies we work with have an answer on paper for how they would respond to disruptions like these. The ones with most confidence in that answer have already tested it — running scenarios to see how those decisions will actually behave across the supply chain before disruption forces the choice.

“The organisations navigating disruption best are rarely the ones reacting fastest. They are the ones that have already explored the scenarios and understand how their supply chain will behave before disruption forces the decision.”

Humanoid Hype? Get Real

The hype around humanoids in logistics needs to take a reality check when it meets the warehouse floor, writes Denis Niezgoda (pictured, below), CCO of Locus Robotics.

At the International Robot Exhibition in Tokyo humanoids stole the show once again. Machines that walk, grip, and gesture like us have an undeniable magnetism, part science fiction promise, part genuine engineering marvel. Yet behind the spectacle, logistics leaders are asking whether these machines deliver demonstrable ROI, or if the industry is chasing a compelling idea that cannot yet scale.

Investment banks are certainly bullish. Morgan Stanley forecasts a global humanoid robot market worth $5 trillion by 2050, with deployment rates eventually reaching one machine for every ten humans. Those forecasts may well prove directionally right over decades. But logistics buyers don’t invest on 2050 narratives, they invest based on what can be deployed, integrated, and scaled in the next 12–24 months.

Innovation is only real when scaled

I’ve had countless conversations with CEOs in this industry who express frustration about being trapped in endless pilots and struggling to achieve meaningful traction. The pattern is familiar; exciting technology, impressive demonstrations, but no clear path to the kind of measurable, referenceable customer value that drives genuine adoption. What’s changed in warehouse automation is that customers are no longer rewarding novelty, they’re rewarding repeatable, referenceable outcomes delivered fast, in brownfield sites, under real volatility.

While there has become a hyperfocus on humanoids, most of the attention is driven by the fact that they generate a big reaction. We live in a world where reaction doesn’t equate to return on investment. Tim Tetzlaff, Global Head of Digital Transformation at DHL, captured this dynamic perfectly when he said: “Innovation is only real when scaled. Otherwise, it’s just a nice idea.” Too many robotics companies have compelling ideas but struggle to scale effectively, missing the chance to create meaningful customer impact. In practice, the winners in this cycle are the firms that scale through software-defined flexibility, not the ones chasing the most cinematic demo.

There’s a real risk that funding will dry up as ambitions collide with reality. Training robots through thousands of hours of simulation can produce impressive physical capabilities, but it grants them little genuine understanding of how the real world actually works. Warehouses are messy, stochastic environments: congestion, mixed Stock Keeping Units (SKUs), shifting priorities, human variability, and peak swings that don’t show up in lab conditions. Physical AI only becomes meaningful when systems learn from millions of real tasks in production. Purpose-built fleets do that every day, they don’t just learn how to move, they learn how the operation actually behaves. Purpose-built warehouse robots accumulate vast operational experience in the environments they are designed to serve. They know the warehouse floor because they have worked it.

The Gap Between Demo and Deployment

This gap between demonstration and deployment is the crux of the matter. Promotional videos may show humanoids performing acrobatic feats, but none can yet walk into an unfamiliar warehouse and reliably execute the complex, repetitive tasks that drive logistics operations. The most advanced humanoid models on the market today are still positioned as research platforms rather than production ready solutions. Production environments don’t just need a capable robot, they need an orchestration layer that can integrate with Warehouse Management Systems (WMS), Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), and Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES), balance priorities in real time, and keep performance stable through peak periods.

As such, I expect 2026 to bring a wave of consolidation across the robotics sector, as companies locked into humanoid development face mounting pressure to demonstrate tangible commercial value. We’ll see the hype start to fade as customers and investors demand real world results, creating an environment where only the purpose built will survive.


The Opportunity in Front of Us

Here’s the reality that often gets lost in the humanoid excitement, we estimate that less than ten percent of warehouses globally have sufficient levels of automation today. The opportunity isn’t to build robots that look like humans. It’s to build the right solutions for the right tasks. That’s also why flexible automation is winning: operators want capability they can deploy in weeks, scale up or down, and reconfigure when volumes or product mix shift. In a world of uncertainty, adaptability is the real throughput advantage.

At Locus Robotics, we’ve moved beyond Person-to-Goods automation to define an entirely new category: Robots-to-Goods. Robots can now autonomously pick, move, and replenish inventory, performing tasks that previously required multiple human touches. But the hardware is only one piece of the puzzle. The real breakthrough comes from integrating Agentic AI with Physical AI to create systems that sense, decide, and act as one. The value isn’t one heroic robot, it’s a software-defined operation that keeps improving because it learns from the work. Warehouses become cohesive ecosystems rather than disconnected islands of automation.

The Financial Times suggests Japan, with its shrinking population and cultural openness to robotics, could become one of the first major democracies to experiment with widescale humanoid adoption. Perhaps. But for logistics leaders making investment decisions today, the question is not whether humanoid robots are impressive, they unquestionably are, but whether they can deliver the demonstrable, referenceable ROI that operations demand. Purpose built robotics already can and already do.

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