More incidents will have been reported to the TAPA EMEA Intelligence System (TIS) since these monthly e-magazine issues were published and, undoubtedly, most cargo crimes in the Europe, Middle East & Africa region will not have been notified to the Association. But, based on intelligence for those crimes in Vigilant over this period, supply chains in EMEA saw an average daily loss of goods of more than >€579,000 for the less than 30% of crimes sharing a value.
Recorded incidents in the TIS database in Q4 2023 included these headline numbers:
Reports of criminal attacks on facilities and goods in transit are still being reported to TIS for 2023, so these figures are expected to climb even higher.
The latest monthly data for December was based on reports of cargo thefts in 35 countries. These produced an average daily loss of €435,685 for the month or an average of €112,552 for the 120 or 26.4% of crimes declaring a value. This included 32 major incidents targeting supply chains in the region, which produced an average loss of €370,216.
December crimes included:
France recorded 12 major cargo thefts of goods worth €100K or more in December, producing a total loss for these crimes of €3,067,000 or an average of €255,583. Six more major crimes were reported in Germany (total = €2,172,000 & average = €362,000), while Italy was the only other country to see multiple high-value thefts, five in total worth €4,400,000 or an average of €880,000.
Cargo thefts involving individual losses of €100,000 or more were also recorded by TIS in the Netherlands, Norway, South Africa, and Spain in December.
TAPA EMEA also collated a further 16 cargo crimes during the month with losses of goods worth between €50K-€100K, which produced a total loss of €1,156,060. Examples of these incidents included:
Seven of the 18 TIS product categories recording cargo thefts in the month saw double-digit losses:
Fuel thefts, even small quantities of diesel, continued to be a consistent cause of disruption to roadfreight operations.
Six-month analysis of TIS data shows 650 cases of fuel theft recorded in the EMEA region, mostly in Europe, but this is still likely to represent only a relatively low percentage of the total number of fuel losses being suffered by road transport companies. TIS data shows fuel was stolen from trucks in 19 countries in Europe in the last six months, with fuel thieves consistently most active in Germany, which accounted for 427 or >65% of incidents notified to TAPA EMEA in the last half-year. This compares to 55 fuel crimes in France, the second highest country for recorded fuel thefts in the TIS database during this period.
While these crimes are being seen across virtually all states in Germany, fuel thieves appear to be most active in North Rhine-Westphalia (52 reported incidents in 6 months), Baden-Württemberg (47), Lower Saxony (39), Thuringia (37), and Rhineland-Palatinate (33).
This is also one of the main contributing factors to Germany’s position as the European country with the highest number of cargo crimes reported to TAPA EMEA in the last six months of 2023, 1,220 in total. Outside of the high-profile €100m metal inventory fraud in Germany last year, TIS recorded a further 408 losses from supply chains across the country with a combined value of €26,205,966 or an average of €64,230.
Major crimes in Germany from July-December – excluding the €100m loss referenced – produced an average value of €552,426.
Other than fuel, products regularly targeted by cargo thieves in Germany in this period included:
In 395 of the crimes reported in Germany in H2/2023, no regional location was identified. For other crimes, 11 states recorded double digit rates of cargo thefts:
Germany’s position at the top of Europe’s cargo crime table in H2/2023, however, is also driven by higher incident reporting levels than in other European countries, which are likely to suffer very similar, if not greater, rates of incidents and losses.
TAPA EMEA members can find more intelligence and analysis by logging into the TIS database.