º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Train strikes could see shortage of products on shelves and rationing, expert warns

Dr Jonathan Owens is an expert in logistics at the University of Salford Business School

Train stations across the country have been impacted by the strikes this week(Image: PA)

The train strikes could lead to a shortage of products on shelves and even some to be rationed, an expert has warned.

Dr Jonathan Owens from the University of Salford Business School, has looks at how the strikes are impacting freight services as the second of a planned three train strikes got under way on Thursday.

He said: "The pattern of rail strikes currently taking place is strategic as it is causing mass disruption for both passenger and freight movement.

READ MORE: Bentley to release carbon-neutral NFTs to fund philanthropic efforts

"Freight traffic, which predominantly runs at night, are now scheduled to run during the day during at a significant reduced capacity of 20-25%, therefore sharing the network with the limited amount of passenger trains in operation.

"Although freight will take priority over all passenger operations, keeping freight moving with no unplanned stops is key, if this stop-start happens frequently across the network this is when we will start see significant delays on the nationally important freight material.

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Page.

This embedded content is not currently supported.

See it here

"The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is very dependent on the rail network which saw 16.87 billion net tonne-km freight being moved from April 2021 to March 2022, which is 1.8% higher than the pre pandemic levels of April 2019 to March 2020.

"According to the Office of Rail and Road some of the biggest users of rail freight are construction (30.4%) and domestic (38.5%) which covers areas such as our food supply chains. Whilst vitally important our petrol and oil freight movement only accounted for 5.5%.