Southern storm still on track, adding to record rainfall
Another round of heavy rain could soon flood parts of the Carolinas devastated by Hurricane Florence. Records have already been set.
Another round of heavy rain could soon flood parts of the Carolinas devastated by Hurricane Florence. Records have already been set.
Health and safety are the main concerns as crews begin cleaning up from Hurricane Florence. Debris and hazardous substances have been washed into coastal waterways.
Livestock businesses are looking to secure farms from future hurricane calamities; Elon Musk is accused of fraud by the SEC; global trade expected to grow irrespective of the tariffs war.
Traffic has returned to normal for parts of the Carolinas that flooded from Hurricane Florence, but some roads still remain closed as rivers crest.
Rescue has shifted to recovery in areas affected by Hurricane Florence. But crews are still keeping an eye on localized flooding and high tides this week.
Hurricane Florence has practically shutdown any outbound trucking activity out of the North Carolina coastal market
The full brunt of Florence has yet to be felt in the freight market, but there was plenty of regional impact as carriers and shippers scrambled over the past week to mitigate damages.
Charlotte and Atlanta see outsized inbound volumes as carriers move relief suppies into staging areas
Hurricane Florence bears down on the Carolinas. Freight markets are reacting before the first rain drops have fallen.
Models predicting Hurricane Florence’s track are shifting the storm southward after it makes landfall, where it will hug the South Carolina coast and unleash extreme rainfall on the Carolinas.
As the residents on the East Coast prepare for the potential of the largest storm to hit the coast in two decades, logistics professionals should prepare for the disruption it will mean to their networks
As the residents on the East Coast prepare for the potential of the largest storm to hit the coast in two decades, logistics professionals should prepare for the disruption it will mean to their networks