Road freight got simpler in June…not really, but the industry is starting to respond with more structure. At least diesel prices eased, but electrification and autonomous trucks moved closer to daily operations, and discussions around driver health, stronger identity checks and new communities such as #LogistiHER show that people are becoming a real industry priority.
The pressure is still there: parking shortages, inspections, market uncertainty, cargo crime, fake documents and #phantom #carriers continue to create operational risk. But the answer is no longer just more manual control. It is better systems, better data, stronger #verification and a more professional approach to trust, which is something other highly regulated industries, such as banking, have been building for years (more insights in our focus article)
This month’s news selection looks at five signals shaping road transport: energy, technology, regulation, market pressure and security and the positive steps helping the sector become safer, smarter and more resilient.
Одељак 01Cheap diesel returns, but the energy game has changed
In June, diesel prices in Germany fell back to levels last seen before the Iran‑US conflict, helped by falling ICE Gasoil futures and a temporary reduction in energy tax on diesel that expires at the end of June. (energymarketprice) This relieves immediate pressure on transport costs, but it does not change the long‑term reality that logistics in Germany is on track to become a major electricity consumer, with e‑truck fleets driving power demand sharply higher by 2045.
From a fleet perspective, structured transition approaches for commercial e‑fleets are now well documented, and real‑world tests such as IVECO and GRUBER Logistics’ electric truck pilots show that electrification is entering day‑to‑day operations instead of remaining a pure “future topic”. At the same time, IRU warns that without better framework conditions for charging, incentives, and grid access, e‑fleet roll‑outs will stall. Solar truck‑roof concepts explored in German industry media add incremental fuel savings, but they are no substitute for systemic infrastructure planning.
As a result, falling diesel prices buy time, but do not remove the strategic need to plan for electricity as a core input factor in logistics.
Одељак 02Autonomous trucks move from pilot to power play
In the US, lawmakers are preparing regulations that allow driverless trucks under defined conditions, accelerating the shift from human‑only trucking to mixed or autonomous operations. (talkinglogistics) In Europe, large players are moving: DSV - Global Transport and Logistics, one of the world’s biggest forwarders, is entering autonomous trucking, and military logistics initiatives such as Quantum Systems’ unmanned truck convoys show how automation is being tested in high‑risk, high‑demand environments.
These developments go beyond technology testing: autonomous capacity is increasingly framed as a strategic response to driver shortages, cost pressure and route standardisation.
For European shippers and carriers, the relevant question is no longer “if” but “how fast” autonomous capacity will become an accepted part of long‑haul and hub‑to‑hub transport.
Одељак 03State vs. logistics: parking, borders and compliance
The German federal government is under pressure to fix the chronic shortage of secure and legal truck parking spaces, and new programmes aim to reduce “chaos” on motorway rest areas. (talkinglogistics)
At the same time, the #EuropeanCommission has formally called on Germany to abolish ongoing internal border controls, arguing that they reduce efficiency and contradict Schengen‑area principles.
Supervision is tightening: [Federal Logistics and Mobility Office ](https://www.linkedin.com/company/bundesamt-fuer-logistik-und-mobilitaet/?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_publishing_post_edit%3BeoAgVnz2RoSi6AjVPdk4cA%3D%3D) ALM inspections in May again produced violations in driver rest‑time rules, showing that compliance gaps remain in everyday operations.
For operators and shippers, this means that infrastructure, border policy and enforcement intensity together define how “frictionless” the network really is, far beyond pure transport capacity.
Одељак 04Market “stability” that can turn quickly
Network operators and indicators send mixed but worrying signals. ELVIS AG - Europäischer Ladungs-Verbund Internationaler Spediteure AG warns that apparent stability in the transport market is “deceptive”, while the Bvl Logistics' indicator records another deterioration in sentiment. On the other hand, exports from Germany have grown for three consecutive months and European export flows are stabilising despite the Iran conflict, with several reports highlighting Europe’s role in supporting logistics providers and export business. (talkinglogistics)
This combination of growing export volumes with weakening mood among logistics managers, suggests a market that is structurally fragile: demand is present, but profitability and confidence are under pressure.
For shippers and carriers, it means that rate and capacity negotiations may feel “normal” today but can swing quickly with any new shock.
Одељак 05Driver health and cargo security: risk is human and physical
A joint symposium by #IVSS (Section for Prevention in Transport) and BG Verkehr focuses on driver health as a prerequisite for reliable long‑distance goods transport, highlighting fatigue, chronic illness and lack of preventive programmes as operational risk factors. (talkinglogistics) This pushes driver wellbeing from a “HR topic” into the core of capacity and safety planning.
On the cargo‑security side, DACHSER presents structured measures to prevent cargo theft in its “Keine Chance für Ladungsdiebe” piece, from secure network design to process controls and physical protection. Combined with rising freight‑fraud and phantom‑carrier cases highlighted by insurers, the message is clear: without systematic verification and security, operational risk will increase faster than capacity.
Одељак 06LogistiHER. A platform for inclusive leadership in logistics
A new community is launching in EMEA to make women in transport, logistics and supply chain more visible, connected and influential, and it is called LogistiHER. This initiative is co‑led by Agnieszka Wojnowska and our Chief Growth Officer Diana Apakidze, and is hosted on LinkedIn.
#LogistiHER is designed as an open professional space for women in operations, warehousing, security, sales, technology, compliance and leadership to connect, share knowledge and opportunities, and turn everyday experience into visible leadership. The first informal online networking meeting in September will bring women together to exchange ideas, discuss challenges and opportunities, and co‑create the future direction of the community, with a special call for guest speakers, mentors and industry experts who want to lead sessions, join panels or share their career stories. If you are a woman in logistics, check them out.
Одељак 07Focus: Logistics is where fintech was in 2012
The fraud patterns hitting supply chains today are not new. Banking and fintech lived through exactly this and spent a decade paying for it. Logistics is at the beginning of that same journey, but it doesn't have to repeat every mistake.
Twelve years ago, a wave of identity-based fraud was quietly dismantling trust in European financial services. It didn't look dramatic. There were no bank robberies.
Instead, criminals were opening accounts with forged documents, impersonating existing customers, buying dormant legal entities and using their clean history to pass compliance checks.
Onboarding processes built for a slower, more analogue world were being gamed systematically by people who had studied them carefully.
The industry took years to learn how to identify who is on another side of the screen, longer to build proper defences, and longer still to get regulation to back up. The losses in between were enormous.
If we look what is happening with company and person identities in cargo and logistics, we can identify same patterns.
Одељак 08The attacks are the same. The sector is different.
Phantom carrier fraud works by exploiting the gap between what a carrier appears to be and what it actually is. A criminal group presents a transport company, real documents, valid licence, registered address, possibly even positive platform ratings and uses that identity to collect a load that then disappears. The cargo is gone before anyone realises the company collecting it wasn't who it claimed to be.
The three core techniques map directly onto the fraud taxonomy that fintech spent years learning to name and counter:
-Account takeover. In banking, this means a fraudster gains control of a legitimate customer's account and uses it to authorise transactions. In the Düsseldorf case decided in May 2026 (Landgericht Düsseldorf, reported by Trans.INFO), a criminal group accessed a freight exchange using the identity of a genuine, reputable forwarding company based in Bremen.
The mechanism was a single character: the real company's .de domain replaced with .com. From behind that cover, the group accepted transport orders and collected cargo. Total losses exceeded €800,000. Same attack architecture as banking account takeover - the "account" is just a freight platform profile rather than a current banking account.
-Synthetic identity fraud. In fintech, this involves assembling an identity from a mix of real and fabricated elements, like a real registration number, a fabricated director, a genuine address, that passes automated onboarding checks and then builds a credible transaction history before the fraud occurs.
The BBC investigation published in November 2025 found organised criminal networks in the UK doing exactly this in logistics: acquiring legitimate haulage companies, sometimes using the identity of a deceased person, operating them as genuine subcontractors for long enough to establish credibility, then using that credibility to be assigned high-value loads. The official paperwork was real. The company history was real. The intent was not.
-Urgency engineering. Authorised Push Payment fraud, one of the most costly fraud categories in UK banking, works by creating artificial time pressure that prevents the target from pausing to verify and proceed to an action (in fintech - payment).
The logistics equivalent is embedded in the phantom carrier approach: urgent loads attract fraudulent carriers because urgency compresses the time available for verification, and because legitimate-sounding operational reasons for last-minute changes ("the original driver is sick, here are the new details") are harder to question when a shipment needs to move now.
None of these are new ideas. They are adaptations of tested attack patterns to a sector where the identity verification infrastructure is roughly where banking was before regulators forced it to modernise
Одељак 09What made fintech vulnerable then is what makes logistics vulnerable now
The fintech industry did not become a fraud target because it was careless. It became a target because three specific conditions converged at the same moment: a new product category moved fully online, identity documents that looked real were real, and the fraud only surfaced when someone tried to collect on a debt that was never going to be repaid.
The product was short-term, small-ticket lending. Regulatory frameworks hadn't caught up yet, so lenders could issue loans entirely online, with no physical identity verification, no face-to-face check, and no requirement to verify the applicant's identity against a government register rather than against the documents the applicant submitted themselves. That last detail is where everything broke. The documents weren't fake. They were genuine, stolen documents. Run them against official databases and they checked out, because they were the real thing attached to the wrong person. The fraud didn't announce itself until the loan went into default, a recovery team tried to reach the borrower at their registered address and phone number, and found someone who had no idea a loan existed in their name.
Logistics is running the same playbook in a different sector, at a higher ticket size, and with faster timelines. Freight management has moved online. Orders are placed on digital exchanges, documents are submitted by email or through platform portals, and the whole process from carrier approach to loading confirmation can happen in under an hour without anyone picking up a phone.
The identity documents submitted by a phantom carrier are not always forgeries in the crude sense. They belong to a real company. The transport licence is valid. The commercial register entry exists. The insurance certificate checks out. The fraud only surfaces when the consignee calls to ask where the load is or if you perform a real liveliness check, the real carrier says it never accepted the job, and someone finally dials the number on file and discovers it doesn't reach the company it was supposed to.
The root condition is identical in both cases: verification happened against the document, not against an independent source. In fintech, it took regulatory pressure and years of losses to fix that. In logistics, the losses are already there.
The German Insurance Association (GDV) tracked 88 confirmed phantom carrier cases in Germany alone in the first seven months of 2025, as many as in the entire previous year, with a full truckload disappearing every three days (GDV, 2025). UK freight theft losses rose from approximately £68 million in 2023 to £111 million in 2024 (TT Club and BSI Consulting, Freight Crime Report 2026).
These are not the numbers of a problem in its infancy. They are the numbers of a problem that has found its method and is scaling it.
Одељак 10What fintech got wrong first
The financial services response to identity fraud went through roughly three phases, and the first two were expensive mistakes.
The first instinct was to add friction at onboarding: more documents, longer processes, more manual review. This slowed legitimate customers without stopping sophisticated fraudsters, who had better documents than most honest applicants.
The second instinct was to treat each attack as an isolated incident rather than a pattern. A bank that suffered account takeover through a look-alike domain warning its own customers was useful. The same information not reaching competing banks or insurance carriers was not. Fraud networks, by contrast, shared intelligence and refined their methods continuously.
The third phase, which actually worked, was systemic: standardised electronic identity verification against authoritative sources rather than submitted copies; continuous monitoring rather than point-in-time onboarding checks; risk-tiered verification where the depth of checks scales with the size and novelty of the transaction; and shared intelligence infrastructure so that a fraudulent identity flagged at one institution doesn't simply move to the next.
The Entrust 2026 Identity Fraud Report finds that deepfake technology is now involved in approximately 20% of biometric fraud attempts in financial services, with AI-driven injection attacks rising 40% year over year, and notes that the tooling behind these attacks is increasingly available and affordable.
The TT Club and BSI Consulting's 2026 Freight Crime Report documents criminals already deploying AI-generated credentials and deepfake identities in logistics (TT Club / BSI Consulting, 2026). The technological escalation that took a decade to arrive in fintech is arriving in logistics faster, because the tools are already built.
Одељак 11The lesson is not "Do what banks did" but learn from them
It would be a mistake to conclude that logistics simply needs to copy the fintech compliance playbook.
The operational context is different, the regulatory environment is different, and some of what fintech built was driven by regulatory mandates that don't yet exist in transport, though eIDAS 2 (Regulation (EU) 2024/1183), which explicitly names transport as a sector where digital identity wallets must be accepted by December 2027, is closing that gap.
The transferable lesson is narrower and more specific: the unit of trust in logistics is the carrier identity, and that identity is currently verified the way a bank customer was verified in 2008 by looking at the document the counterpart hands you, rather than checking it against an independent authoritative source.
The three principles fintech eventually converged on apply directly.
like commercial register, VAT ID system, registered domain, transport licence database and not against submitted PDFs.
not a one-time check at onboarding, because a company that was legitimate when it registered on a platform may have been acquired by a criminal network since.
a routine load to a long-standing carrier and a high-value first assignment to a recently registered company are not the same transaction and should not be treated identically.
None of this requires waiting for regulation. The tools exist. The data sources exist. The question is whether the industry decides that carrier identity is a risk management problem, the way banks eventually decided that customer identity was a risk management problem, or continues to treat it as an administrative checkbox
Одељак 12Where this goes without action
Fintech's decade of friction was expensive in ways that went beyond direct fraud losses. Insurance premiums rose. Regulators imposed requirements that cost far more to implement under pressure than they would have cost to build proactively. High-profile fraud cases changed customer behaviour in ways that took years to reverse. The industry didn't choose that path. It just didn't choose the alternative fast enough.
The trajectory in logistics is not inevitable, but it is visible. Cargo insurance premiums for high-risk categories are already moving. Underwriters are starting to ask questions about carrier verification processes that most shippers and LSPs are not used to answering. The Düsseldorf conviction made headlines because it made the mechanism legible to people outside the industry. The BBC investigation did the same. Neither story surprised anyone who had been watching the data. Both stories surprised almost everyone else.
That gap, between those paying attention and those who aren't, is exactly where organised crime operates.
The networks running phantom carrier schemes today did not start from scratch. They inherited a toolset that fraud networks in financial services spent a decade refining: AI-generated documents, acquired legal entities with clean histories, coordinated multi-vehicle operations timed for peak periods, social engineering scripts tested across thousands of attempts. They got to this level of sophistication faster than fintech fraudsters did, because the tools were already built. All they had to do was redirect them.
What doesn't transfer from fintech is the timeline. Logistics doesn't get a decade to figure this out. The acceleration is already baked in. Thanks to AI.
“For Karlheinz Toni, Trusted Carrier's CEO, it is very familiar. Before founding Trusted Carrier, he led an online financing platform in the Netherlands that was verifying six million identities on a yearly basis, both consumers and businesses, after regulators tightened the standards that the platform's original onboarding process had been built around. Not because the original checks were negligent. Because the bar moved, the threat evolved, and the identities that had passed onboarding cleanly a year earlier could no longer be trusted to the new standard.”
Running that exercise at scale, in real time, on a live platform with active customers, is a different problem entirely from building verification correctly from the start. That experience is a direct input into how Trusted Carrier was designed:
Verification infrastructure built to evolve, not to be replaced.
The question isn't whether phantom carrier fraud becomes a systemic problem. It already is one. The question is whether the industry builds the verification infrastructure before regulators mandate it under crisis conditions, before insurers price out the high-risk segments, and before a handful of high-profile cases shift shipper behaviour in ways that take years to recover from. Fintech learned that lesson the hard way, at a cost that ran into billions and took the better part of a decade to work through. The shortcut exists. The infrastructure model is proven. The only thing missing is the decision to build it now rather than after the damage makes it unavoidable.
Извори и додатна литература
- German Insurance Association (GDV): Phantom carrier case data, Germany, January–July 2025
- IUMI and TAPA EMEA: Joint warning on cargo theft and freight fraud, February 2026
- TT Club and BSI Consulting: Freight Crime Report 2026
- BBC: Investigation into organised freight crime in the UK, November 2025
- Trans.INFO: Reporting on the Landgericht Düsseldorf conviction, May 2026
- Entrust: Identity Fraud Report 2026
- EU: Regulation (EU) 2024/1183 (eIDAS 2)
PRODUCT UPDATE:
Trusted Carrier has brought something into road transport that has so far been normal in banking, but almost unheard of in logistics: banking level of #identity #verification of the people who move your cargo.
We are the first in the industry to combine liveliness checks and biometric verification with transport operations. That means we don’t just collect a scan of an ID document and hope for the best. We actively verify that the person in front of the camera is a real, live human being, and that their biometric data matches their official identity documents.
In practical terms, it is the same level of identity assurance you expect when opening a bank account or taking out a loan, only now it’s applied to drivers, dispatchers the legal representatives of a company.
Why does this matter? Because most fraud, cargo theft and compliance problems start with one simple weakness: you don’t really know who is behind the steering wheel, the login, or the email address claiming a load. Phantom carriers, fake drivers and cloned identities exploit the fact that logistics still relies on PDFs, email threads and “hope” instead of verifiable identity.
By making liveliness checks and biometric verification part of the onboarding and approval process, we close that gap. Carriers, forwarders and shippers can approve people faster and with more confidence, while reducing the risk that a fake identity slips into their network. And it only takes 3 minutes to fully complete that verification.
Curious to try and see what is your risk score as a driver, legal representative of your company or an employee? Send us a request and perform a free verification.
Одељак 13June at Trusted Carrier
The Transported Asset Protection Association EMEA Annual Conference in Oberhausen (10 - 11.06.) showed how quickly the cargo security conversation is changing. Theft prevention is no longer only about locks, parking areas and physical controls. The discussion is moving toward intelligence, AI, verified networks, certified carrier ecosystems and end-to-end risk management.
That shift matters. Criminals are no longer relying only on opportunity. They are exploiting fragmented processes, fake documents, cloned company identities, cyber-enabled fraud and the pressure inside daily transport operations. In response, many of the solutions discussed at TAPA EMEA were built around data, visibility, standards and faster decision-making.
One of the clearest signals was the launch of the Certified Carrier Exchange by TAPA EMEA and Trans.eu, built around verified TAPA TSR-certified carriers. It reflects a broader market movement: trust in road freight is becoming something that has to be verified, documented and continuously managed.
For Trusted Carrier, the event was an important confirmation of market timing. Our Phantom Carrier identification, fake documents, “Take a break from freight fraud” campaign and KitKats helped start conversations, but the substance behind those conversations was much bigger: companies are actively looking for ways to reduce fraud risk before the load moves.
The two days in Oberhausen brought strong feedback, new contacts, partnership conversations and very practical insights from the TAPA community. Above all, they confirmed that freight security is becoming more structured.
Later in June, on the 25th the discussion continued in Stuttgart at the VSL / SVG Süd event on phantom carriers. The event brought together perspectives from freight forwarders, insurers, legal experts, security specialists and technology providers. The message was clear: phantom carrier fraud is no longer only about detecting suspicious documents. It is about understanding how fraudsters exploit pressure, trust, fragmented processes and gaps in responsibility.
One important takeaway from Stuttgart was how strongly the topic is now moving into the space between insurance, liability and operational documentation. Companies are not only asking how to prevent fraud. They are also asking what they need to prove when something goes wrong. That makes verified identities, documented checks and clear processes increasingly important. Read more in our summary.
Одељак 14Where to Meet Us Next
NetzwerkForum [TRANSPORTLOGISTIK.NRW](http://transportlogistik.nrw/) at[ Schmitz Cargobull AG](https://www.linkedin.com/company/schmitz-cargobull-ag/?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_publishing_post_edit%3BeoAgVnz2RoSi6AjVPdk4cA%3D%3D) in Altenberge - 14 July.
The event brings together innovation and security in transport logistics - from data, digital driver processes and smart trailers to phantom carrier risk and security in the transport chain. Our CEO Karlheinz Toni will take part of the final panel discussion on experiences with security in transport and logistics.
For us, this is exactly where the industry conversation needs to go:
Trusted Carrier Logistik GmbH builds the identity and verification infrastructure that makes road freight trustworthy. www.trustedcarrier.net
