By Maria Kalamatas | The Logistic News
June 10, 2025 – Section: EchoChain / Resilience & Regions
Dubai, UAE – The June 2025 edition of Logistics News Middle East places the spotlight squarely on one theme: regional resilience. In a time of global volatility, Middle Eastern logistics giants are showcasing a coordinated shift toward continuity, digital transformation, and adaptive infrastructure.
From DP World’s agile port operations to Aramex’s evolving e-commerce fulfillment networks, the message is clear—resilience is no longer reactive; it’s strategic.
“We used to talk about disruption as an external force. Today, we plan for it as a structural constant,” said Adel Al Dhaheri, Head of Regional Operations at Kanoo Logistics. “Our supply chain models are being rebuilt to absorb shocks, not avoid them.”
DP World’s headline strategy focuses on predictive container routing, combining satellite data, historical traffic flows, and AI-driven cargo modeling. This has helped several terminals across the Gulf avoid critical delays during periods of high volatility in the Red Sea and Indian Ocean shipping lanes.
Meanwhile, Aramex is enhancing last-mile flexibility through automated micro-hubs and same-day rerouting tools, particularly in urban zones such as Riyadh and Doha, where e-commerce volumes remain high and variable.
The role of digital infrastructure continues to grow. Dnata has expanded its digital cargo management solutions, enabling end-to-end shipment visibility for air freight customers across multiple Emirates. Their cloud-based system now integrates seamlessly with customs in more than seven countries, accelerating cross-border processes by up to 30%.
“Visibility equals trust, and trust equals continuity,” said Kareem Nasser, CIO at dnata. “Digital resilience is the foundation for operational resilience.”
A common thread across the players is a renewed focus on regional self-reliance. While global trade remains essential, the emphasis has shifted to reinforcing MENA-based capacity—through warehousing, bonded facilities, and talent investment.
Industry observers point to a shift in mindset: from competition to collaboration. New public-private working groups have emerged in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, aligning tech rollouts, risk preparedness drills, and regulatory adaptations.
The June edition serves as both a progress report and a call to action. Logistics in the Middle East is no longer simply catching up with global norms—it is actively redefining resilience on its own terms.
Maria Kalamatas
Senior Correspondent – Middle East Resilience & Supply Strategy
The Logistic News