The week ending April 5, 2020 saw a 39% drop in available loads in the spot market. It is hard to quantify exactly what percentage of those were in the food sector, but it is safe to say that COVID-19 is now attacking the food industry full force. While the past few months have seen Global and Domestic Supply Chains bend, crumble, or come to a screeching halt, many felt we would always be able to efficiently move food to where it is needed. This past week has given us an eye-opening look at just how devastating COVID-19 is to even our most critical infrastructure sector. Eating patterns have changed in the face of stay-at-home and social distancing orders. These changes have affected every facet of the food supply chain including the consumer, the grocery store, restaurants, and the actual farm.
Produce Season Won’t Be the Same
The Meat & Dairy Industries Downshift
The Lack of Agility in a Critical Supply Chain
What we are encountering is a monstrous disruption with fatal consequences. Our response should be equally as powerful, but it so far has yet to rise to those levels. We have all the food we need for our citizens but we can’t get it to where it needs to go. Grocery store shelves are still bare at the end of the day (if not the beginning sometimes) and producers are scaling back or actively throwing out product because we cannot get it to those shelves.
What we have learned is there is no food supply chain. There are restaurant supply chains, grocery supply chains, produce supply chains, meat and dairy supply chains, and 100s more fragmented supply chains. Each of these supply chains serve a market and when one market collapses, all the points in that supply chain collapse or suffer rather than being able to shift. Regardless of how consumers shift demand, the freight industry is always going to feel the brunt of that move and be required to adjust accordingly. Hopefully there will be enough lessons learned from this pandemic to prepare supply chains to react better to the next major economic disruption.