Auba

Auba

Technology, Information and Internet

AI co-pilot to empower leaders with unparalleled visibility, efficiency, and control over their supply chain.

About us

Auba’s premise is that supply chain professionals should have tools that help them automatically detect and proactively avoid delays and disruptions before they have a financial impact.

Industry
Technology, Information and Internet
Company size
11-50 employees
Type
Privately Held
Founded
2023
Specialties
Artificial Intelligence, Supply Chain, Logistics, and Software

Employees at Auba

Updates

  • Auba reposted this

    View profile for Diego Solorzano, graphic

    building auba.ai | avoid supply chain delays and disruptions

    🚨 Huge news alert: Mexico just announced one of the most important business decisions of the last half a century. This weekend, president Claudia Sheinbaum is set to inaugurate an expansion to the port of Manzanillo that could make the country a logistics powerhouse. For reference, Manzanillo is already a very important port. In 2023 alone, it handled almost 3.7 million containers. This makes it: * The largest port in Mexico * Third in Latin America (after Colon, Panama, and Santos, Brazil) * 53rd globally But despite these numbers, Manzanillo leaves a lot to be desired. In terms of capacity, the U.S. has far exceeded Manzanillo. The port of L.A. handles more than double the containers in a year; so does Long Beach and N.Y. Most crucially, the port has suffered some major disruptions in the past 6 months. Some are due to natural disasters, such as Hurricane John earlier this year, which forced the port to shut down operations and pushed wait times considerably.  Additionally, this summer, the port suffered technical difficulties that increased delays considerably. Now, with the expansion, the port would quadruple its size by 2030. If all goes well, it is estimated that the new port of Manzanillo will be able to handle well over 10 million TEUs. That would make it 𝘁𝗵𝗲 15𝘁𝗵 𝗹𝗮𝗿𝗴𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁 𝗼𝗻 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗽𝗹𝗮𝗻𝗲𝘁. Not to mention similar plans to expand the ports of Ensenada and Progreso, as well as the focus on the ports of Salina Cruz and Coatzacoalcos to create an interoceanic corridor to rival the Panama Canal. Mexico could really become a logistics powerhouse to rival any other country in the world. The next few years should be exciting!

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  • Auba reposted this

    View profile for Diego Solorzano, graphic

    building auba.ai | avoid supply chain delays and disruptions

    A crisis, that affects us all, yet few are talking about: 54.4% of all ocean shipments (roughly 33% of all global shipments) will arrive late this year. For perspective, nearly  80% of global trade relies on ocean transport. Now, the world’s largest ocean carriers are falling short in their performance, with 54.4% of shipments arriving late as of mid-2024. This reliability drop began in early 2023 and shows no sign of stabilizing. Data from Sea Intelligence, tracking the top 15 carriers—controlling 86.5% of over 31 million containers—paints a troubling picture:. * Before COVID-19, ocean carriers boasted a reliability rate above 75%. * Now, the industry is barely managing 50%. * Main culprits: the historic Panama Canal drought, Suez Canal blockades, and U.S. port labor strikes. Major global trade routes are clogged (e.g. Singapore), and even the world’s “best” carriers are struggling to deliver on time. * Average shipment delays, which peaked at 7.9 days during the pandemic, initially dropped to around 4 days. In early 2024, delays rose again to 6.18 days before briefly decreasing to 4.74 days. Recently, delays have climbed back above 5 days, reaching 5.19 days. So, which carriers are faring (pun intended) better? * Hapag-Lloyd led at a 55.4% reliability rate, while ZIM lagged at 44.4%, making it the worst performer. Almost all carriers, except Yang Ming, saw substantial drops in reliability. Some —like Maersk and MSC— experienced declines of over 13 percentage points. However, rankings are all over the place (just look at the graph below). At Auba, we analyzed top carrier performance and estimated that over 10.3 million containers—or 33.18% of the global fleet—will experience delays in 2024. This means roughly a third of all containers worldwide, even among the most efficient carriers controlling 86.5% of global container capacity, will face disruptions. If your company is facing this issue, let’s chat!

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