Leaders to address global logistics challenges at University of Hull
22/04/2026
Industry leaders, government advisers, defence specialists and senior academics will gather in May to examine the mounting pressures facing global supply chains -
Event: Beyond Resilience: How Adaptive Capacity Creates
Competitive Advantage in Logistics – register here
Date: Wednesday 20 May 2026
Venue: University of Hull, Logistics Institute
To register, please use the following link.
The University of Hull’s Logistics Institute, a global
centre of excellence for applied logistics and supply chain research, will host
the second annual Peter Thompson Public Lecture and workshop, focusing on how
organisations can build resilience and move from crisis response to proactive,
adaptive capacity.
Dr Sarah Shaw, Reader in Logistics and Supply Chain
Management at Hull University Business School, said:
“The UK faces an urgent need to redesign how goods,
information and energy move through global networks in more intelligent,
decarbonised and circular ways.
“The challenge is not just making supply chains more
resilient — it is reimagining how they are designed and governed. By embracing
data, systems thinking and adaptive logistics models, we can move beyond
perpetual disruption management and build long-term competitive advantage.
“Through its research, partnerships and engagement with
industry, the Logistics Institute is helping organisations rethink how supply
chains are designed, managed and governed in the face of increasing complexity.”
The event will explore how supply chains can anticipate and
adjust to shocks such as supplier failures, extreme weather, port congestion
and sudden shifts in demand. Adaptive logistics systems use digital
technologies, real-time data and flexible operating models to support faster
decision-making and more resilient networks.
The lecture also highlights the University’s growing
leadership in logistics innovation and supply chain resilience, especially
within the Humber region — one of the UK’s most important trade, energy and
industrial clusters.
Dr Shaw added:
“The Humber is a strategic corridor at the centre of one of
the UK’s most significant industrial ecosystems. While it remains a major
source of industrial emissions, it is also a major opportunity. By developing
smarter, adaptive supply chains, this region can become a global testbed for
how industrial clusters transition to cleaner, more resilient economies.”
Speakers include:
- Mike Soutar, business leader and former media executive
- Vice Admiral Andy Kyte CB FCILT, MOD
- Professor Richard Wilding OBE, Cranfield University
The lecture and workshops will:
- explore opportunities on how logistics systems can shift from reactive crisis management to proactive resilience;
- examine the role of AI, digital twins and advanced analytics in enabling real-time supply chain adaptation;
- identify research, skills and policy priorities for transforming global supply networks;
- strengthen collaboration between industry, government and academia;
- shape a roadmap for building adaptive advantage in UK and global logistics.

