# logistics
Latest news and articles about logistics
Total: 15 articles found

China Says Homegrown C919 Has Carried Over 4 Million Passengers as Transport Tech Surges
China’s transport minister reported that COMAC’s C919 jet has safely carried over four million passengers during the 14th Five‑Year Plan, and that the country’s automated container terminals lead globally in scale and technology. The statements underscore Beijing’s industrial push to move transport systems from pilot projects to commercial scale, with implications for aviation competition, logistics efficiency and global supply chains.

Dubai’s ‘Discounted’ Gold Is a Wholesale Story, Not a Retail Bonanza
Viral videos claiming Dubai jewellery was being sold at steep discounts mischaracterised a wholesale phenomenon. Retail 24K gold in Dubai remained priced around 623 AED per gram, while discounts of up to $30/oz were confined to wholesale bullion trading due to logistical disruptions.

Middle East Conflict Forces Dubai Dealers into a $30/oz Gold Fire Sale
Flight suspensions and airspace closures tied to the Middle East conflict have stranded large amounts of gold in Dubai, driving traders to sell at discounts of up to $30 per ounce to avoid mounting storage and financing costs. The disruption has created short-term tightness for Asian refiners and increased logistics costs, highlighting vulnerabilities in the physical bullion supply chain.

Why a US–Israeli Ground Invasion of Iran Remains Improbable: Logistics, Politics and Regional Limits
Political constraints in Washington, hedging by Gulf states and the daunting logistical, geographic and asymmetric-defence challenges inside Iran make a large-scale US–Israeli ground invasion unlikely in the short term. Expect a continued reliance on airstrikes, naval control efforts and limited operations rather than a full-scale occupation unless Iran’s internal stability collapses.

Gulf Under Fire: How Middle East Escalation Is Upending Chinese Businesses and Global Supply Lines
A sudden escalation of hostilities across the Gulf has disrupted flights, ports and last‑mile services, stranding Chinese businesspeople and delaying shipments. Firms are scrambling to reroute cargo, protect staff and absorb higher costs, while the episode forces a reassessment of how resilient China’s commercial ties to the Gulf must be.

Delivery Repackages the Reunion: Chinese New Year ‘Family Dinner’ Goes Digital
Search interest in delivered and takeaway reunion dinners spiked sharply ahead of this year’s Spring Festival, prompting restaurants and platforms to scale delivery services into urban and rural areas. The shift points to a significant reconfiguration of a core cultural ritual, with implications for restaurants, logistics providers and environmental and labour concerns.

Frontline Fixes: PLA Military Representatives Run to the Troops to Root Out Equipment Faults
A PLA Army Equipment Department military representative office has been proactively visiting front-line units to diagnose equipment faults, supervise digital-simulation repairs, and deliver targeted maintenance training. Its work — formalizing feedback loops between users and manufacturers and tightening quality controls — strengthens sustainment and operational readiness across China’s armed forces.

When the Army Kitchen Goes Viral: What a Viral PLA Cook-Unit Post Reveals About China's Military Messaging and Logistics
A viral post from China Military Vision highlighting a professional PLA cook unit does more than astonish internet users: it signals the Chinese military's emphasis on logistics, soldier welfare and image management. Such human-centred content both reassures domestic audiences and points to broader modernization priorities.

A Cookhouse Goes Viral: What a PLA Kitchen Clip Says About China’s Military Messaging
An official PLA video highlighting the professionalism of a military cook squad has gone viral, drawing praise and attention not for combat capability but for troop welfare and logistical competence. The clip is a deliberate public-relations move that underscores the PLA’s modernization beyond hardware, with implications for recruitment, domestic legitimacy and strategic messaging.

From Badge to Bankbook: What JD’s First Courier Reveals About Labour, Welfare and Brand Strategy in China’s E‑commerce Boom
JD Logistics’ first courier, Jin Yicai, has retired with property, savings of over RMB1 million and a monthly pension of about RMB4,000, a profile JD has publicised to highlight its direct‑hire, welfare‑oriented logistics model. The story underscores JD’s strategy of higher labour costs in exchange for employee stability and brand advantage, contrasting with the outsourced, gig‑style labour common elsewhere in China’s parcel industry.

JD Pumps More Than ¥1.3bn into Frontline Pay as E‑commerce Faces Cost and Reputation Pressures
JD.com has allocated over ¥1.3 billion in subsidies for frontline employees, a move that supports delivery and warehouse staff amid weak consumer demand and reputational pressure. The measure protects service capacity and signals responsibility, but it also raises questions about margin impact and whether the boost will be temporary or structural.

China's Forces Put Realism to the Test: Drills Hard‑wire High‑altitude, Extreme‑weather and Logistics Capabilities
Several Chinese military and paramilitary units have conducted closely observed, realism‑oriented exercises covering field engineering, UAV operation, high‑altitude reconnaissance, extreme‑cold logistics and jungle mobility. The training indicates a systemic emphasis on sustainment, terrain‑specific tactics and inter‑unit coordination designed to improve readiness across diverse operating environments.