Hawk Ellery NZ

Hawk Ellery NZ Whether you’re importing or exporting products by sea, land, or air, we make sure it all goes to p

🇮🇩 Due to the Foot and Mouth outbreak currently affecting Indonesia, all containers from Indonesia will be subject to a ...
28/07/2022

🇮🇩 Due to the Foot and Mouth outbreak currently affecting Indonesia, all containers from Indonesia will be subject to a six-sided inspection and a supervised dean. This is effective immediately. 🇮🇩

The MINISTRY FOR PRIMARY INDUSTRIES SAY:

Further to our communication last week regarding stepping up our actions to protect New Zealand from Foot-and-Mouth disease (FMD) please see explicit instructions regarding containers ex-Indonesia.

If you import containers from Indonesia, you will be emailed a Biosecurity Authority Clearance Certificate (BACC) stating:

‘Indonesia FCL (or FAK) verification. External inspection / 6-sided and supervised unpacking required. To be unpacked under direct supervision of an MPI inspector by an Authorised Person (AP). Container is not to be opened until the MPI Border Clearance Inspector is present’.

To arrange inspection, call your local MPI Office. If you receive a BACC directing this, please contact your Regional MPI office to arrange an inspection.

A Quarantine Officer must be present at the opening of the sea container alongside an Accredited Person(s). You will not be charged for these inspections.

Our key priority is keeping foot-and-mouth out of New Zealand and your support is appreciated.

Visit MPI’s website for more information on foot-and-mouth disease.

*** END OF FREIGHT-NEWS REPORT ***

If you're concerned about how this could affect your business’s importations, please email us directly on [email protected] or call us directly ☎️ on +64 9 275 8080.

KEEP YOUR FINGER ON THE PULSE with Ellery NZ
Follow Hawk Ellery // Freight News to stay informed with the latest news regarding hazardous cargo and transport operations.
Going The Extra Mile Everyday 🌏



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FREIGHT TO GIVE YOU A FRIGHTAuckland Museum will become the first place in the southern hemisphere to exhibit a Tyrannos...
12/04/2022

FREIGHT TO GIVE YOU A FRIGHT

Auckland Museum will become the first place in the southern hemisphere to exhibit a Tyrannosaurus rex (T rex) skeleton when ‘Peter’ makes his world debut this month.

Hawk Ellery are proud to have organised Peter’s latest journey half way round the world.

He is set to appear at the Auckland Museum from April 15th 2022 and people will be able to see one of the largest land predators of all time.

Measuring 12m in length and nearly 4m high, the skeleton is an awesome sight, posed in what would have been the T. rex’s hunting position.

Only four obsidian black T. rex skeletons have ever been found so this free, world premiere is a once in a lifetime experience not to be missed.

*** END OF FREIGHT-NEWS REPORT ***

Call us directly ☎️ on +64 9 275 8080.
KEEP YOUR FINGER ON THE PULSE with Ellery NZ
Follow Hawk Ellery // Freight News to stay informed with the latest news regarding hazardous cargo and transport operations.
Going The Extra Mile Everyday 🌏

Visit Hawk Ellery Online : www.hawkellery.co.nz

New Zealand Herald article, Friday 20 August 2021By: Kate MacNamaraA STORM AT SEA: SOARING PRICES AND RAMPANT UNRELIABIL...
20/08/2021

New Zealand Herald article, Friday 20 August 2021
By: Kate MacNamara

A STORM AT SEA: SOARING PRICES AND RAMPANT UNRELIABILITY IN GLOBAL SHIPPING

The spot price paid by customers for ocean-going container shipping has now risen by about 500 per cent over 2019 figures.

All of Nick Coubray's steel fabrication machines scheduled for export in May were either delayed or cancelled. One machine, destined for Australia, was prepped for shipping and the container was delivered to his factory for loading. At the last minute, Coubray got word that the vessel on which the machine was booked wouldn't call into New Zealand. The container was collected, still empty.

Coubray, chief executive of Auckland-based manufacturer Howick Ltd, says his Australian customer was fuming. That's hardly surprising. After much scrambling the machine was booked on a freighter aircraft a month later for $19,000 - three times the original cost.

The process is now painfully familiar. Howick, which makes machines that manufacture steel components used in construction, still has three orders for US customers, originally scheduled to ship in mid-June. Two will leave this month and one is booked for mid-September, fingers crossed. He's got a Canadian shipment that has been similarly delayed.

"I've got customers who're worried that shipments from this part of the world just won't come; I'm stockpiling nuts, bolts, steel, things you'd never think you'd run out of. Shipping prices are way up, and the turnaround time for getting machines to customers [almost all of them overseas] is all over the place. We've just never seen issues like this," Coubray says.

In a world of "just in time" delivery, where components for almost all goods flow from around the world and the finished products are typically exported again, the cost of container shipping turns up in the price of just about everything. Like the oil price, it's ubiquitous; close to 60 per cent of world trade moves by ocean-going container, according to United Nations data. And in the last year the system has gone completely haywire.

The spot price paid by customers has now risen by about 500 per cent over 2019 figures, according to Copenhagen-based Sea-Intelligence. And the profits reaped by Maersk alone, the world's largest shipping line, topped US$2.7 billion in the first quarter of this year, greater than the sum total of all the company's first-quarter profits in the preceding decade.

But the problems in shipping aren't limited to the sky-rocketing price of service. Beyond that are a rash of surcharges - for empty containers due back at overflowing container yards, for example - and of "blanked ports", when a regular port of call is simply dropped from a route, often because the scheduled vessel is full or can be more lucratively deployed elsewhere.

A ROLE FOR GOVERNMENT

So far, the New Zealand Government has involved itself mainly at the periphery of the problem. For example, it has smoothed the way for more foreign workers to join Ports of Auckland, where full automation at the container terminal has been painfully slow.
In March, the Ministry of Transport began a series of workshops that included parties from across the supply chain, including port representatives, shipping lines, freight forwarders and importers and exporters, to look for ways to alleviate the difficulties.

So far, the meetings have largely facilitated the airing of problems and provided a forum for floating ideas to solve them. A further meeting between industry players and Ministry of Transport officials is planned for August 25, with the focus on supply chain data.

Many of the proposed changes are for better data systems; one idea is for officials to help create an Expedia-type platform that could search available ships, comparing factors such as price and timing.

The ministry is also working on a long-term strategy for the country's supply chain. Among ideas under consideration is the possibility of a role for government in increasing domestic, coastal shipping, to better distribute goods and empty containers, and to alleviate bottlenecks.

Among the measures it has been asked to consider is subsidising the cost of heavy-lift aircraft to help keep goods moving, in much the same way that it has underwritten the cost of freight on Air New Zealand.

Coubray's firm Howick is among the small and medium-sized businesses that support this option. In November last year, and again several months ago, Coubray priced leasing an Antonov aircraft to get machinery to customers in Europe. The cost was prohibitive. But the idea made its way into a set of proposals presented to Phil Twyford, the Minister for Trade and Export Growth, by another specialised manufacturer, Auckland's Exeloo, which makes public toilets.

Transport Minister Michael Wood declined to indicate what further help the Government might offer.

"Severe disruptions to global containerised sea freight persist due to pandemic-driven global consumer demand outstripping available shipping and port capacity," Wood says.
"I am seeking ongoing advice about the appropriate role for government to mitigate these impacts, and am keeping an open mind."

COMPETITION QUESTIONS

Some shippers also believer there's a bigger role for government in policing competition. Late last year the Customs Brokers and Freight Forwarders of New Zealand (CBAFF), which serves as a logistical middleman between importers and exporters and the shipping lines, quietly took a shopping list of concerns to the Commerce Commission.

President Chris Edwards describes the meeting as a "preliminary discussion" based on a handful of key concerns about the shipping lines: the timing of rate rises among consortiums of shipping lines; the size of those increases; the issue of deteriorating services and schedules against a backdrop of massive price inflation; and some billing practices (typically, charging for delayed return of empty containers when circumstances like full container yards make return impossible).
The commission, Edwards says, offered the advice that it may ultimately be possible to pursue some of the practices in court under amendments to the Fair Trading Act.

The new provisions will hold that smaller contracts, worth under $250,000, are unfair if they would cause "significant imbalance" in the parties' rights and obligations under the terms of the contract.

Such a change might provide some legal recourse to thousands of small importers and exporters, currently smarting over extra charges that are often levied at short notice.

One example that had shippers seething is a US$1000 "container drop off fee" introduced last month by the shipping line MSC for its Auckland customers. From July 8, shippers who "dehired" their Australian import containers in Auckland (where they docked) would be subject to the surcharge, per container, on top of the negotiated freight rate. The alternative is to return the empty container to Tauranga at the shippers' expense.
However the legislative changes aren't expected to take effect for another year. And the Commerce Commission appears to have its hands full. It has a final market study of New Zealand's supermarket duopoly due out this year, and a planned investigation of building materials pricing is to follow.

A commission spokeswoman says, "the commission explained [to CBAFF] how the Commerce Act operates, in particular in relation to the shipping exemption (which shields some shipping conduct from the Commerce Act but does not prevent its application to cartel conduct)."

"The commission continues to follow issues in the shipping supply chain sector and seeks information on anticompetitive conduct relating to the shipping supply chain sector."

SHIPPING LINES

The Commerce Act exemption allows shipping lines to co-ordinate and share vessel capacity on routes. But it remains prohibited to either directly or indirectly fix prices, unreasonably limit capacity, or allocate markets.

The World Shipping Council, which represents shipping lines, maintains that the industry "remains highly competitive by any measure" and a lack of competition is not the cause of cargo congestion.

"The Covid-19 cargo congestion brought on by extreme demand in combination with operational disruptions is very real and felt across supply chains globally," says spokeswoman Anna Larrson. "Even though deployed vessel capacity is at an all-time high, with all available ships carrying cargo, the large and sustained increase in global demand has physically overwhelmed the available capacity on land as well as at sea.

"Congestion in ports and inland transport is causing bottlenecks that suck up capacity. It is a tough situation for all, and like shippers, container carriers are also very frustrated at the disruption and strain of not being able to meet customer expectations on service levels."

ALLIANCES

It is true, however, that after years of consolidation, container traffic is now dominated by nine major players, organised into just three distinct alliances. A decade ago, the list of major lines was roughly 20 and their coverage of container trade was less than 30 per cent.

The three alliances - 2M (Maersk, MSC); Ocean Alliance (Cosco-OOCL, CMA CGM, Evergreen); and THE Alliance (Hapag-Lloyd, ONE, Yang Ming) - now control more than 80 per cent of overall container trade and operate some 95 per cent of the total ship capacity on East-West trade lanes (Asia-Europe, Asia-US, US-Europe), where the major containerised flows occur, according to the International Transport Forum.

The first alliances emerged in the 1990s, largely as a way for smaller and mid-sized operators to compete with the larger players by sharing vessel space. Now, however, they are a dominant feature of the industry, and include all the biggest lines.

FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS

Shippers in New Zealand aren't alone in their growing suspicion of these alliances. This month business groups in the UK, including the British Chambers of Commerce, wrote to the competition watchdog asking for a formal investigation into the shipping industry. The UK Competition and Markets Authority says it is consulting international counterparts while it considers whether to take further action.

The issues have prompted an even noisier response in the US. Last month, US President Joe Biden asked regulators to crack down on consolidation in a range of industries, including shipping. His executive order noted that "the global container shipping industry has consolidated into a small number of dominant foreign-owned lines and alliances, which can disadvantage American exporters."

INDEPENDENT OBSERVERS

One problem, many independent observers say, is that much of the ire directed at container shipping lines is related to the current tangle of high prices and lousy service. And both of those factors are easily explained, at least in large measure, by supply and demand.

John Mangan is a professor of logistics at the University of Newcastle in the UK: "I think we've got a lot of obvious reasons for the price spike. Now there might well be anticompetitive practices in container shipping and other sectors of shipping. But if it is an issue, I think it would take a lot of proving.

Remember that even beyond the alliances there is a lot of vessel sharing between lines, they'll buy slots on competitors' services. And it happens in other sectors too. If you go to DHL you'll often see FedEx boxes."

Alan Murphy is chief executive and founder of Sea-Intelligence, a Copenhagen-based data and analytics firm that tracks the container shipping industry.

He says that until last year, shipping alliances had been driving prices down rather than up.

"Essentially, shipping lines bought mega-vessels, they formed alliances to fill all of that capacity, and they ended up in price wars because once they have the same routes and the same terminals, price is the only place left to compete," he says.
"From 2010 to pretty much 2020, all we wrote about was how the shipping lines were struggling, and how long could this go on and everything was horrendous for them."

At the centre of the upward price spiral in the last year is not a global cabal, says Murphy, but the US consumer.

"Unless Biden has a bunch of vessels in his back pocket he can't do anything. I don't see how regulation can help."

A FLY IN THE OINTMENT

A final difficulty for governments scratching their heads over ways to unknot the supply chain is that larger importers and exporters tend to sign long-term contracts with shipping lines, and so far they have they've been more insulated from price spikes than their smaller counterparts.

Simon Beale heads the New Zealand Council of Cargo Owners, which represents many of the country's largest shippers. His organisation has been relatively conservative in its requests of the Government.

In a recent letter to Minister Wood, the council asked that the Government make no changes to labour law to discourage 24/7 work, and that it make no change to the current "cabotage" policy that allows international vessels to move empty containers around New Zealand. Much of the letter reads like an appeal not to interfere.

That tack doesn't surprise Nikos Nomikos, professor of shipping finance and risk management at City University of London.
He thinks the bigger moves available to governments could backfire spectacularly. New ships and containers won't alleviate the capacity shortage any time soon, but orders placed by shipping lines have skyrocketed in the past six months. And when that new capacity does arrive, next year and beyond, the shipping lines are counting on the efficiencies of vessel sharing to fill it.

"Suppose you disallow alliances," Nomikos says, "maybe now you just get a wave of mergers and acquisitions and you create even more industry concentration." Perhaps the biggest risk is thinking things can't get any worse.

*** END OF FREIGHT-NEWS REPORT ***

If you're concerned about how this could affect your business’s importations, please email us directly on [email protected] or call us directly ☎️ on +64 9 275 8080.
KEEP YOUR FINGER ON THE PULSE with Ellery NZ
Follow Hawk Ellery // Freight News to stay informed with the latest news regarding hazardous cargo and transport operations.
Going The Extra Mile Everyday 🌏

Visit Hawk Ellery Online : www.hawkellery.co.nz

06/08/2021

As per industry draft consultation, The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) has proposed the BMSB 2021-22 seasonal measures will apply to target vehicles, machinery and parts (VPM) exported from risk countries, on or after, 1 September 2021 and 30 April 2022 (inclusive), and to vessels that berth, load, or tranship from target risk countries within the same period.

BMSB target goods must be fumigated offshore before arriving to New Zealand. Furthermore, all shipments from Italy require treatment before arrival in New Zealand despite commodity and container type.

There is one exception to this rule:

BMSB management is not required if target vehicles, machinery, and parts are loaded into a fully enclosed container which is sealed before 1 September and then exported before 1 October of the same year.

To use this exception, evidence will need to be provided of container sealing in the form of the seal number and a date-stamped photo. More details can be found under the import health standard.

NZ BMSB COUNTRY MANAGEMENT

BMSB management measures apply to target vehicles, machinery, or parts from the countries listed in schedule 3 of the import health standards.

A full list of 37 countries under the NZ BSMB measures can be found on the MPI website.

TREATING VEHICLES, MACHINERY AND PARTS FOR BMSB

Treatment of vehicles, machinery, and parts will only comply with BMSB measures if treatment is carried out by an MPI approved offshore treatment provider prior to arrival in NZ.

BMSB COMMODITY TYPE EXEMPTIONS

A number of exemptions for new, lower-risk types of VMP when certain criteria apply and a manufacturer’s declaration is submitted.

BMSB REQUIREMENTS FOR SEA CONTAINERS FROM ITALY

Italy is a country with large BMSB populations and increased associated risk. Containers and their contents must be treated with an MPI-approved treatment provider, prior to arrival in NZ.

Therefore, no types of vehicles, machinery and parts (includes new tyres) are eligible for BMSB management exclusions under the Import Health Standard.

*** END OF FREIGHT-NEWS REPORT ***

If you're concerned about how this could affect your business’s importations, please email us directly on [email protected] or call us directly ☎️ on +64 9 275 8080.
KEEP YOUR FINGER ON THE PULSE with Ellery NZ
Follow Hawk Ellery // Freight News to stay informed with the latest news regarding hazardous cargo and transport operations.
Going The Extra Mile Everyday 🌏

Visit Hawk Ellery Online : www.hawkellery.co.nz

Whether you’re importing or exporting products by sea, land, or air, we make sure it all goes to p

14/07/2021

GOING THE EXTRA MILE EVERYDAY.

Wherever your business is located in New Zealand, we'll connect you with the world.

We're New Zealand’s leading freight logistics experts:

Call us directly ☎️ on +64 9 275 8080
Visit Hawk Ellery Online : www.hawkellery.co.nz

07/07/2021

Most of you will be aware of the current congestion worldwide around Shipping and the supply chain. We do not expect congestion or price fluctuations to improve before quarter 2 next year (or further).

Hawk Ellery would like to encourage all our customers to complete their Xmas orders from Europe, USA and Asia as soon as possible to avoid late delivery to your customers.

Transit times from Asia are creeping up towards 6-8 weeks and longer from USA and Europe.

Peak season is nearly upon us, and with the existing backlog of cargo from all ports, bookings are becoming extremely challenging, and delays and rolled bookings are becoming more frequent.

Added to that is the current situation at Ports of Auckland with some vessels sitting anchored for up to 2 weeks before they can berth.

There is a strong rumour that another major Shipping Line from Europe will be pulling their service to NZ which will add more pressure to the situation.

We strongly urge you to complete your purchase orders earlier than you usually would to enable a buffer for inevitable delays in Shipping.

We will continue to monitor and keep you informed of developments, please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any queries,

Team Hawk Ellery

*** END OF FREIGHT-NEWS REPORT ***

If you're concerned about how this could affect your business’s importations, please email us directly on [email protected] or call us directly ☎️ on +64 9 275 8080.
KEEP YOUR FINGER ON THE PULSE with Ellery NZ
Follow Hawk Ellery // Freight News to stay informed with the latest news regarding hazardous cargo and transport operations.
Going The Extra Mile Everyday 🌏

Visit Hawk Ellery Online : www.hawkellery.co.nz

Whether you’re importing or exporting products by sea, land, or air, we make sure it all goes to p

🌏 Further to our previous posts with respect to global trade and shipping, we would like to advise that the situation wi...
21/05/2021

🌏 Further to our previous posts with respect to global trade and shipping, we would like to advise that the situation with vessel backlogs, empty container shortages, schedule changes and port omissions has continued.

🚢 Global ports have reported hundreds of vessels not yet docked as scheduled, therefore lead times will be hugely impacted. Please take this into consideration when committing to fixed in store dates with your customers.

🇮🇳 In addition to the above, the pandemic in India has taken its toll across all sectors including manufacturing. Labour and the availability of staff has been reduced significantly to help curb the situation and bring Covid under some sort of control. The aim is to help prevent further disaster within an already crippled nation.

🔍 Given the above, we will continue to monitor all developments and emerging concerns and keep you informed.

📞 In the meantime, if you require further information or clarification, please do not hesitate to contact us.

Now that the Suez Canal has been cleared the fallout in delays is becoming evident and as time progresses the situation ...
22/04/2021

Now that the Suez Canal has been cleared the fallout in delays is becoming evident and as time progresses the situation may morph to become worse.

🚢 🚢 🚢 🚢 🚢 🚢 🚢 🚢

As much as 1.9 million teu (20FT equipment space) of cargo is expected to be caught up in the Suez Canal incident. The severe congestion will shortly engulf many of the world’s largest container ports.

The canal blockage has led to a cumulative delay to shipping fleets of 1,072 days and the largest ports are expected to withstand the worst of a short-term surge in ship calls as carriers try to get services back on schedule.

🇸🇬 Over 370,000 teu of capacity is currently en route to the world’s largest transhipment hub of Singapore, adding to the 83 vessels – collectively equating to 299,310 teu – already at the port, or anchored and waiting to unload, as of yesterday (according to the Singapore port authority).

🇳🇱 The same scenario is set for Rotterdam, where 15 ships, representing 196,600 teu, will arrive over the next week, creating a lengthy queue behind the 85 vessels already at port or waiting to enter.

🇺🇸 New York is facing a backlog of 76,500 teu, either having arrived or still inbound from the Suez Canal.

🇲🇾 Malaysia’s Port Kelang has a build-up of 103,900 teu.

🇦🇪 Dubai is facing 75,879 teu (a record volume for Dubai).

As ports attempt to clear this mounting backlog, there will also be an impact on liner schedule reliability. This will affect all international traders particularly around securing space.

The knock-on effects of the 7 days delay to vessels transiting the Suez Canal will heavily impact Asian ports, with vessels arriving at ports off-schedule and adjusting rotations to catch up.

🇪🇺 As Europe origin cargo mostly tranships in Singapore to Australia & NZ, the congestion may see a bunching of vessels and potential blank sailings. The western European direct service offered by CMA CGM and MSC to NZ via Australia’s east coast is under severe stress with bookings being rolled or cancelled in some instances.

As always, we appreciate your patience and will endeavour to deliver as up to date information as we can regarding your respective consignments.

This next 3 months will be exceptionally challenging to secure space and unfortunately normality in container shipping is still some time away.

*** END OF FREIGHT-NEWS REPORT ***

If you're concerned about how this could affect your business’s importations, please email us directly on [email protected] or call us directly ☎️ on +64 9 275 8080.
KEEP YOUR FINGER ON THE PULSE with Ellery NZ
Follow Hawk Ellery // Freight News to stay informed with the latest news regarding hazardous cargo and transport operations.
Going The Extra Mile Everyday 🌏

Visit Hawk Ellery Online : www.hawkellery.co.nz

Due to ongoing weather disruptions / congestion and overbooking throughout EU / MED we are seeing space and equipment av...
11/03/2021

Due to ongoing weather disruptions / congestion and overbooking throughout EU / MED we are seeing space and equipment availably EX-ITALY change rapidly.

At this present time many shipping lines can only offer space and equipment towards the end of March / April and in some instances, May.

Another challenge is that shipping lines aren’t able to confirm bookings as quick as usual and for some bookings the shipping lines are not able to confirm bookings at all. They instead put the booking on “Stand-By”. This then may mean that particular sailing is being cancelled resulting in other vessel’s being overbooked and the booking in place being severely rolled or cancelled.

Please also keep in mind that with the delays to feeder vessels arriving into Italian ports, the loading dates are likely to change so the dates given at the time of booking are not concrete. The loading date is all dependent on when the feeder berths at port and when the departure date is planned for. As a result of these changes, there is a possibility loading dates may change in order to avoid additional charges.

Below is an overview of the current situation with the shipping lines out of each port:

ANCONA

ONE: Space available in approximately week 14/15
COSCO: No sailings available
MSC: Available space on the sailing ETD 26/03

GENOA

Hamburg: First available sailing is the Hobby Hunter ETD 05/05
MSC: Limited space at the end of March, however MSC suggests to book ex La Spezia as the alternative.
CGM: Service via Kingston available ( 65 day transit ), space available end of March
OOCL: Space available in approximately week 14/15
COSCO: Limited space at the end of March

LA SPEZIA

Maersk: Space in April, however ongoing delays into port with vessels which affects the ETD’s / loadings.
MSC: Available space on the sailing ETD 26/03
ONE: First sailing available 29th March
OOCL: Space available in approximately week 14/15
COSCO: Limited space at the end of March.

RAVENNA

Maersk: Agents have to check case by case
CGM: Agent awaiting update from the shipping line
MS : Agents have to check case by case
Vado Ligure –
Maersk: Limited space at the end of March

VENICE

Maersk: No space available, unsure when this will change
ONE: Space available in approximately from 09/04
MSC: Available space on the sailing ETD 26/03
CGM: Space available in approximately week 13/14
OOCL: Space available in approximately from 09/04
COSCO: Agent awaiting update from the shipping line

Please do note that this situation is continually changing and although space may be available now, it may not be available tomorrow.

****** END OF FREIGHT-NEWS REPORT *******

If you're concerned about how this could affect your business’s importations, please email us directly on [email protected] or call us directly ☎ on +64 9 275 8080.

KEEP YOUR FINGER ON THE PULSE with Ellery NZ
Follow Hawk Ellery // Freight News to stay informed with the latest news regarding hazardous cargo and transport operations.

Going The Extra Mile Everyday 🌏


Visit Hawk Ellery Online : www.hawkellery.co.

Address

Unit 2, 197 Montgomerie Road, Mangere
Auckland
2022

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 7am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 7am - 5:30pm
Thursday 7am - 5:30pm
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Telephone

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GOING THE EXTRA MILE EVERYDAY

If you’re in the import or export industry, transporting products is a big part of your business. So you don’t want to hand the job over to just anyone.

At Hawk Ellery, we focus on consistent, personal service and proactive processes. We build great relationships with our customers and agents, so you know you’re getting the best service, wherever your goods are headed.

HERE’S HOW IT WORKS


  • Personal service – we don’t use answerphones, so you’ll speak to a real person every time you call