The Midweek Market Update is a recurring series that keeps shippers and carriers informed with market trends, data, analyses, and insights.
On Tuesday, Hurricane Ian strengthened to a Category 3 storm, and will most likely continue to strengthen over warm waters. Ian is now forecasted to take the worst-case path, and recent reports predict a direct hit south of Tampa.
Hurricane Ian poses a threat as the worst hurricane Florida’s west coast has seen in over a decade. The anticipated landfall is Wednesday evening. On Tuesday, the governor lifted hours of service (HOS) restrictions for drivers and issued a state of emergency and mandatory evacuation for hundreds of thousands of residents. Routes such as I-75, I-4, I-275, and I-95 are experiencing heavy congestion and traffic.
Starting Tuesday, we will start seeing a significant impact on trucking capacity. Some carriers are already alerting us that they have drivers opting not to work during the storm and instead are parking their trucks for the time being. Others have moved capacity to the spot market to support relief loads from FEMA and other essential product shippers.
With the scale of the potential impact, this storm will not only affect Florida’s west coast. The eastern coastline, including Jacksonville, is anticipating issues from storm surges.
However, Florida is not the only state that will be impacted. Ian is still expected to be a tropical storm or depression as it moves through Georgia and the Carolinas. Shippers and FEMA will likely stage freight across a wide range of areas in case the storm changes paths. This will likely cause a domino effect on capacity disruption in Florida’s neighboring markets.
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