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AIR CARG O WEEK


WEEKLY NEWS


THE CASE FOR SMARTER, MORE SECURE CARGO TRACKING IN A FRACTURED SUPPLY CHAIN


BY Curtis SPENCER, CEO of Bloodhound Tracking Device


In today’s global supply chain, visibility isn’t just a competitive advantage — it’s a matter of national and economic security. Every day, millions of trucks, trains and ships move critical goods through complex, multi-modal networks. Yet despite the technological progress we’ve seen elsewhere, cargo tracking remains alarmingly fragmented,


leaving huge blind spots that expose companies to


theft, loss, and costly inefficiencies. Over


the past decade, supply-chain professionals have made


remarkable strides in analytics and automation. But when it comes to knowing where high-value cargo actually is — in real time and with integrity — the system still relies on a patchwork of barcodes, paperwork, and unreliable GPS data. Freight moves faster than the information about it, and that lag is where the vulnerabilities multiply. According to CargoNet, theft incidents across the US and Canada


reached 3,625 reported cases in 2024, a 27 percent increase over 2023. The average loss value per incident rose to US$202,364, up from US$187,895 the previous year, as organized crime rings increasingly targeted electronics,


Q2 2024 alone, incidents spiked by 33 percent year-over-year, with hotspots in California (+33 percemt) and Texas (+39 percent), according to Risk and Insurance. The answer lies in deploying next-generation tracking systems combine


that security features with global communication


coverage, and machine intelligence. Hybrid devices — capable of switching between cell networks to satellite connections, to IoT mesh networks — now allow for uninterrupted visibility from manufacturing to final delivery, whether a shipment is crossing a desert highway, stacked deep inside a container ship crossing the Pacific, or moving through three different countries on a double stack train. Just as importantly, this technology must evolve within a secure transportation process. True visibility means not


just


07 food, and pharmaceuticals. In


tracking


location accurately but also providing proof of the integrity of the cargo. In a world where supply-chain cyberattacks can cripple entire industries, systems must verify every breach, the data must be protected; every packet, and transmission secured through trusted, encrypted channels. The logistics and cargo industries are already adapting. Major


carriers, freight forwarders, and shippers are investing in IoT- enabled “security trackers” that offer live monitoring of breach events, temperature, shock, tampering, and location. Integrating these with blockchain-based or cloud-certified networks creates an end-to-end chain of custody — a digital twin of every movement, authenticated and auditable. For an industry that underpins 80 percent of global trade, the


next decade will define whether we continue reacting to disruptions or start preventing them. Smart, secure tracking isn’t a luxury for global supply chains — it’s a prerequisite for resilience. The winners in logistics will be those who see cargo security not as an afterthought, but as the foundation for trust, efficiency, and continuity


in an unpredictable world. doesn’t cut it anymore. Anything lesssimplyjust


www.aircargoweek.com


12 JANUARY 2026 ACW


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