Supply Chains Are Becoming More Fragile - Global

: Billion-dollar weather disasters now occur roughly every three weeks , a fourfold increase from the 1980s. Environmental disruptions, such as droughts in the Panama Canal and severe mudslides at key copper mines, are projected to cost supply chains $120 billion in 2026 alone.

To combat this fragility, organizations are moving away from traditional "just-in-time" models toward more resilient, albeit costlier, configurations: Supply chain trends in 2026 - Marsh

: Heavy reliance on concentrated sources for materials like semiconductors, lithium, and rare earths has become a systemic threat. Shortages in these sectors directly impact the automotive and clean energy industries, leading to record-high prices and heightened volatility. Shifting Corporate Strategies

Supply chain risks are likely to remain at the forefront of global economic resilience and business continuity challenges in 2026.

: The rise of "geopolitical competition" has split trade into competitive blocs. U.S. tariff volatility is cited by 72% of trade professionals as the most impactful regulatory change in 2026, up from 41% just a year prior. These "dynamic tariffs" can change landed costs overnight, forcing rapid and expensive sourcing re-evaluations.

: Billion-dollar weather disasters now occur roughly every three weeks , a fourfold increase from the 1980s. Environmental disruptions, such as droughts in the Panama Canal and severe mudslides at key copper mines, are projected to cost supply chains $120 billion in 2026 alone.

To combat this fragility, organizations are moving away from traditional "just-in-time" models toward more resilient, albeit costlier, configurations: Supply chain trends in 2026 - Marsh

: Heavy reliance on concentrated sources for materials like semiconductors, lithium, and rare earths has become a systemic threat. Shortages in these sectors directly impact the automotive and clean energy industries, leading to record-high prices and heightened volatility. Shifting Corporate Strategies

Supply chain risks are likely to remain at the forefront of global economic resilience and business continuity challenges in 2026.

: The rise of "geopolitical competition" has split trade into competitive blocs. U.S. tariff volatility is cited by 72% of trade professionals as the most impactful regulatory change in 2026, up from 41% just a year prior. These "dynamic tariffs" can change landed costs overnight, forcing rapid and expensive sourcing re-evaluations.