Allied Council for Commerce and Logistics explained

Allied Council For Commerce And Logistics
Type:Non-Profit
NGO
Founded:2010
Location:Egypt
UAE
India
Area Served:Worldwide
Industry:Shipping
Logistics
Supply chain management
Services:Humanitarian
Education
Agriculture
Supply chain management
Social Service
Professional Memberships
Scholarships

The Allied Council for Commerce and Logistics (ACCL) is a philanthropic, Non-Profit NGO functioning in the field of shipping and logistics. ACCL was registered in 2010 under the Societies Registration Act, Government of India.[1]

History

The reason behind the formation of ACCL was the dispute between Government of India and the Supreme Court of India regarding the distribution of food grains which was getting damaged due to bad logistics.[2] ACCL was formed with a view to bring private shipping & logistics companies and logisticians to input their views and ideas to improve the plight of Humanitarian Logistics, Agricultural Logistics, Commercial Logistics and Logistics Education in developing countries.

Area of Operations

Agricultural Logistics

High delivery costs and rising prices caused primarily by a fragmented supply chain, bad logistics, together with poor standards are hurting Developing Countries agriculture exports much more than trade barriers, according to a World Bank report.[3] Despite producing 11 per cent of the world's vegetables and 15 per cent of fruits at very competitive costs of about 53 per cent and 63 per cent of average global prices, India's share in global fruits and vegetables trade has remained at only 1.7 per cent and 0.5 per cent, respectively, the report points out. The council works on the grass root level to train and educate the farmers from rural areas regarding the importance of switching to organized logistics. Traditionally the farmers have been concentrating only on the production aspect of agriculture but the subsequent and most important part of processing, storing and distribution has been largely ignored. This has cost the farmers to receive less price for their products, exploited mainly by the middle men.

Humanitarian Logistics

The devastating Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 prompted an unprecedented response from the humanitarian sector. International relief organizations, including the UN, the Red Cross and NGO's, sprang into action, often in collaboration with new or existing partners. Within affected countries, national governments, the armed forces, corporations, social groups and citizens all responded. The resources raised for the humanitarian effort were also unprecedented.The tsunami experience demonstrated once again that a lack of back-room capacity results in front-line failures. This was particularly true for the supply chain (the process of assessing, mobilizing, transporting, tracking, warehousing and distributing supplies and relief items). Surveys performed by international organizations found that there was a severe shortage of logisticians in the field.[4] The 2009 flood in North India also exposed our unpreparedness to meet such circumstances. ACCL is conducting various grass root level programs among the rural communities, NGO etc. to train and educate them regarding the importance to humanitarian logistics and the need for the readiness to face the challenges during such operations.

Commercial Logistics

Logistics operations in developing countries are still in infant stage. Lack of infrastructure, business processing systems knowledge among small to medium logistics companies have resulted in higher cost and poor performances.[5] Allied Council for Commerce and Logistics provides small to medium scale logistics companies with the following main services.

Professional memberships

Social Networking of Logistics

Enterprise Resource Planning

Logistics Education

Allied Council for Commerce and Logistics conducts various courses with the help of private partnerships. ACCL provides scholarships to under privileged students seeking a career in shipping and logistics. Logistics education have been traditionally considered to be expensive and out of the reach for a majority of students from developing nations. The fund required for providing scholarships to students comes mainly in the form of Government funds and private contributions.

Logistics Courses

The council conducts various courses by partnering with private institutes. Few of them are stated below.

Scholarships

Scholarships are provided to students from Scheduled Cast, Scheduled Tribes, Other Eligible Cast based on their financial status.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ACCL. ACCL official website. NGO. ACCL. 26 February 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110310053438/http://www.alliedcouncil.org/. 2011-03-10. dead.
  2. News: Times of India. Distribution of food grains. 26 February 2011. Times of India. Aug 31, 2010.
  3. Web site: World. Bank. M/s. Business. Rediff. 26 February 2011.
  4. Web site: Humanitarian Practive. Network. Shortage of Logisticians. Humanitarian. HPN. 26 February 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110720033719/http://www.odihpn.org/report.asp?id=2756. 2011-07-20. dead.
  5. Web site: Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Limited. Bad Logistics in India. Infrastructure Services. ILFSL. 26 February 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110713010008/http://www.ilfsindia.com/downloads/bus_concept/Logistics.pdf. 13 July 2011. dead. dmy-all.