A new annual risk assessment has identified cybersecurity threats and deteriorating transportation infrastructure as the foremost challenges facing global supply chains in 2026. The report highlights that major disruptions — rather than everyday operational issues — are the greatest danger to freight, logistics networks and trade flows in the year ahead.
According to the analysis, cyber-attacks on logistics operations spiked sharply in 2025, with ports, carriers and logistics service providers increasingly targeted. The sophisticated nature of these attacks is now a key concern for shippers, as digital systems that support freight booking, tracking and documentation become prime targets for malicious actors.
Another significant supply chain vulnerability cited in the report is aging physical infrastructure. The study warns that long-deferred upgrades to highways, rail lines and port facilities have left freight networks susceptible to breakdowns and bottlenecks, particularly as extreme weather events increase both in severity and frequency. Investments in modernising infrastructure are projected to run into the trillions of dollars by 2040, underscoring the scale of the challenge.
The report also spotlights shifting geopolitical conditions and trade policy uncertainty as notable risk factors. Rapid changes in tariffs, border regulations and international agreements can disrupt established trade routes, complicate cross-border logistics planning, and increase compliance costs for multinational supply chains.
To address these threats, the study emphasises the need for integrated risk management strategies that combine strengthened cybersecurity frameworks, infrastructure resilience planning and flexible sourcing arrangements. Logistics leaders say that coordinating these efforts will be essential to keeping freight moving smoothly through 2026 and beyond.
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